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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Nasal fungal infection in cats treated with clotrimazole spray

By Julia Possebon Santi et al.·Published in Brazilian Journal of Veterinary Medicine·2022·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: Intranasal clotrimazole spray 1% associated with oral itraconazole for nasal feline sporotrichosis: a case series

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats with nasal sporotrichosis, a fungal infection, were treated with a combination of intranasal clotrimazole spray and oral itraconazole. Despite some cats having previously struggled with treatment, all seven cats showed improvement and achieved clinical remission within 60 days. The treatment was generally well-tolerated, with only minor liver enzyme elevations noted in tests, but no serious side effects were observed. This combination therapy appears to be a promising option for managing this challenging condition in cats.

People also search for: cat nasal infection treatment · feline sporotrichosis symptoms · itraconazole for cats · clotrimazole spray for cats

Abstract

Abstract Feline sporotrichosis is a major clinical problem among cats in Brazil and is also a neglected, but important, public health issue, due to its zoonotic potential. The nasal clinical form of the disease is particularly challenging, having treatment refractoriness and clinical signs relapse as common features. This case series study aimed to preliminarily describe the effects of the azolic antifungal drug, clotrimazole, as a topical 1% solution spray, together with per os itraconazole on inducing disease remission, as well as treatment tolerability and safety. Medical records of the Feline Medicine Service from the Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro were reviewed, and 7 feline patients met the inclusion criteria (confirmatory diagnostic reached, available follow-up records, and use of intranasal clotrimazole 1% solution –1 spray per nostril every 24 hours– as adjunctive therapy to itraconazole – 100 mg/cat per os every 24 hours). Among these, 4 had a history of treatment refractoriness done until then. Follow-up records included clinical evaluation, along with complementary tests and owner reports on tolerability and occurrence of adverse reactions. All patients have undergone clinical remission within 60 days. Tolerability were satisfactory, and adverse reactions were only found on complementary tests (hepatic enzyme elevation), without clinical repercussion. The intranasal use of 1% clotrimazole solution has shown as a promising adjunctive therapy to itraconazole for feline nasal sporotrichosis, even in previous refractory cases.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/35749092