Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Lymph node infection by Talaromyces helicus in a Labrador Retriever
By Tomlinson, Julie Kristy et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2011·Department of Pathobiology and Population Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Granulomatous lymphadenitis caused by Talaromyces helicus in a Labrador Retriever.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 3-year-old spayed female Labrador Retriever was brought in because her right shoulder area was swollen. Tests showed that the swelling was due to a fungal infection called Talaromyces helicus, which caused inflammation in her lymph nodes. Unfortunately, despite the diagnosis, the owner chose to euthanize the dog. This case highlights a rare fungal infection that has not been previously reported in pets or people.
People also search for: dog swollen lymph nodes · Labrador Retriever fungal infection · Talaromyces helicus in dogs
Abstract
A 3-year-old spayed female Labrador Retriever was presented for right prescapular lymphadenomegaly. Examination of fine-needle aspirates and impression smears of the node revealed many short hyphal structures found within macrophages and extracellularly. Hyphae were approximately 3 μm in diameter, were irregularly septate with nonparallel walls, and had a small clear halo surrounding a partially stained basophilic internal structure. Hyphae were tapered on one end and had oval to pyriform swellings of 7-10 μm on the other, resulting in a bulbous appearance. Fungal elements stained positively with Gomori methenamine silver and Periodic acid-Schiff stains. The dog was euthanized at the owner's request, and necropsy revealed marked peripheral and visceral lymphadenomegaly. Histopathologic examination of lymph nodes confirmed granulomatous lymphadenitis with many fungal hyphae. Fungal culture yielded pure cultures of organisms that failed to produce ascospores or conidia precluding morphologic identification. PCR was performed using pan-fungal primers, ITS-1 and ITS-2, to amplify the intergenic spacer regions of ribosomal RNA; the PCR product was sequenced and a BLAST search of the GenBank databases at NCBI revealed 100% identity of the organism with Talaromyces helicus, the sexual form of Penicillium helicum. Talaromyces helicus has not previously been reported to cause disease in people or animals.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22136479/