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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Skin thickening and hardening in dogs with distemper virus infection

By Areco, Walter V C et al.·Published in Journal of comparative pathology·2022·Department of Pathology, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Macroscopic Distribution, Histopathology and Viral Antigen Expression in Dogs with Canine Distemper Virus-induced Hyperkeratosis in Nasodigital and Other Regions.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with canine distemper showed thickened and hardened skin, particularly on their footpads and noses. The dogs had varying numbers of affected areas, and a detailed examination revealed specific skin changes linked to the virus. In most cases, the skin lesions tested positive for the canine distemper virus, indicating the virus was present in the skin. Recognizing these skin problems early can help veterinarians diagnose and treat canine distemper more effectively.

People also search for: dog skin problems distemper · canine distemper symptoms · thick skin on dog paws · treatment for dog hyperkeratosis

Abstract

Cutaneous hyperkeratosis is one of the many clinicopathological manifestations of canine distemper and is characterized by thickening and hardening of the skin, predominantly in nasodigital areas. Although this lesion may rarely affect other regions, this has been poorly characterized. Twelve dogs with canine distemper and cutaneous hyperkeratosis, necropsied at an anatomical pathology service, were investigated. Twenty-two cutaneous hyperkeratotic foci were observed on footpads (11/22), nasal planum (3/22), haired skin on the snout (2/22), periocular region (2/22), ventral abdomen (2/22), scrotum (1/22) and vulva (1/22). The dogs had one (5/12), two (4/12) or three (3/12) regions concomitantly affected. Orthokeratotic hyperkeratosis was a predominant histopathological feature in 17 dogs, occasionally accompanied by other lesions, including inclusion bodies (14/17), epidermal hyperplasia (9/17) and keratinocyte hydropic degeneration (6/17). Canine distemper virus antigen was expressed in at least one skin lesion in 10 dogs. Fourteen (14/17) hyperkeratotic foci were immunopositive while three (3/17) were immunonegative. Viral antigen expression was most common in the sweat glands (13/17), epidermis (11/17) and vascular endothelial cells or pericytes (8/17). Histological findings and antigen detection were similar among nasodigital and other regions. We emphasize the importance of clinicopathological recognition of these lesions for the initial suspicion of canine distemper, thereby facilitating early treatment.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35487623/