Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Fluralaner spot-on helps treat cat skin mites and ear infection
By P. Bouza-Rapti et al.·Published in JFMS open reports·2022·View original on Semantic Scholar →
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Original publication title: Effectiveness of a fluralaner spot-on formulation in a case of feline demodicosis due to Demodex cati
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A 7-year-old male domestic shorthair cat was brought in for red, crusty patches on his nose and ear infections. He also had diabetes and was positive for feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV). After testing, the vet found the cause to be a type of mite called Demodex cati. The cat was treated with a spot-on medication called fluralaner (Bravecto), which was applied to the base of his head. By the fourth week, his ear infections were completely gone, and his skin lesions were much better. After eight weeks, the skin issues were almost resolved, and a follow-up at six months showed no recurrence of the problem.
People also search for: cat skin problems treatment · Demodex cati in cats · fluralaner for cat ear infection
Abstract
Case summary A 7-year-old male domestic shorthair cat was presented with a non-pruritic erythematous crusted nasal hypotrichosis along with bilateral ceruminous otitis externa. The cat was diagnosed with diabetes mellitus and was positive for feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV). Deep skin scraping, trichograms from lesional skin and ear canal parasitological examination were positive for Demodex cati. A 250 mg (55.5 mg/kg) fluralaner spot-on for medium-sized cats (Bravecto; MSD) was applied to the base of the cat’s head. Re-examinations were carried out on the fourth, sixth and eighth weeks after therapy. On the fourth week, the ceruminous otitis had resolved completely and the nasal lesions were markedly improved. One dead adult D cati was found in deep skin scrapings while other tests from the skin and both ear canals were negative. On the second re-examination only a mild hypotrichosis persisted on the nasal region and all parasitological examinations were negative. Eight weeks after the initial examination, the skin lesions had almost clinically resolved. On the 12th week, fluralaner spot-on was repeated. No recurrence was noted at the 6-month follow-up. Relevance and novel information The use of isoxazolines has been reported for only a few demodectic cats but was described to be safe and effective. This is the first report to evaluate the efficacy of a single spot-on fluralaner for the treatment of localised dermatitis and otodemodicosis due to D cati, and suggests it as an effective, safe and practical treatment.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/35111330