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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Spontaneous collapsed lung in Ontario dogs caused by lung fluke

By Charlebois, Pierre R et al.·Published in The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne·2023·Ontario Veterinary College, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Local outbreak of spontaneous pneumothorax secondary to paragonimosis in southwestern Ontario dogs.

Species:
dog
Dog coughingBreathing & coughDogs

Plain-English summary

Three dogs in southwestern Ontario were diagnosed with spontaneous pneumothorax, which is when air leaks into the chest cavity, causing breathing difficulties. This condition was linked to a parasitic infection called paragonimosis, caused by trematodes (flatworms) that can be found in freshwater crayfish. The dogs showed symptoms like coughing and were treated with surgery and a medication called fenbendazole. Fortunately, all three dogs recovered and were discharged after treatment.

People also search for: dog coughing treatment · spontaneous pneumothorax in dogs · paragonimosis in dogs · dog breathing problems · dog infection from crayfish

Abstract

Three dogs were diagnosed with spontaneous pneumothorax and referred to the Ontario Veterinary College Health Sciences Centre for management. The 3 dogs were diagnosed with secondary spontaneous pneumothorax due to paragonimosis. The diagnosis was made by visualization of adult trematodes during surgical exploration with histopathological confirmation in 1 dog, and detection of trematode eggsfecal sedimentation in the other 2 dogs. Two of the dogs developed unusual additional lesions, including hemoabdomen, muscle abscess, and abdominal adhesions. These were suspected to be secondary to aberrant fluke larval migration. All 3 dogs lived within a relatively small geographical area of Ontario and were hospitalized between December 2021 and March 2022. Each dog survived to discharge with surgical or medical management of the pneumothorax and treatment with a prolonged course of fenbendazole. Key clinical message: Paragonimosis should be considered as a differential diagnosis for canine spontaneous pneumothorax in areas whereis, or may be, endemic, or in dogs that have travelled to endemic areas - particularly if the patient has a history of cough or potential exposure to freshwater crayfish. Routine anthelmintic treatment does not prevent infection and standard fecal floatation methods may not detect the eggs. Therefore, diagnostic testing should include a fecal sedimentation test and thoracic radiographs to screen for.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37397693/