Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Malassezia yeast overgrowth in allergic cats and skin symptoms
By Ordeix, Laura et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2007·Studio Dermatologico Veterinario, Italy·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Malassezia spp. overgrowth in allergic cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 18 allergic cats showed signs of skin problems, including hair loss, redness, crusting, and greasy brown scales. Most of these cats had atopic dermatitis, and tests for common viral infections came back negative. The cats were treated with antifungal medications, and those receiving a combination of antifungals and antibiotics saw the best results, with significant improvement in itching and skin lesions after 3-4 weeks. This suggests that Malassezia overgrowth can be a common issue in allergic cats and can be effectively treated with the right medications.
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Abstract
A series of 18 allergic cats with multifocal Malassezia spp. overgrowth is reported: atopic dermatitis was diagnosed in 16, an adverse food reaction in another and one was euthanized 2 months after diagnosis of Malassezia overgrowth. All the cats were otherwise healthy and those tested (16 out of 18) for feline leukaemia or feline immunodeficiency virus infections were all negative. At dermatological examination, multifocal alopecia, erythema, crusting and greasy adherent brownish scales were variably distributed on all cats. Cytological examination revealed Malassezia spp. overgrowth with/without bacterial infection in facial skin (n = 11), ventral neck (n = 6), abdomen (n = 6), ear canal (n = 4), chin (n = 2), ear pinnae (n = 2), interdigital (n = 1) and claw folds skin (n = 1). Moreover, in two cats Malassezia pachydermatis was isolated in fungal cultures from lesional skin. Azoles therapy alone was prescribed in seven, azoles and antibacterial therapy in eight and azoles with both antibacterial and anti-inflammatory therapy in three of the cats. After 3-4 weeks of treatment, substantial reduction of pruritus and skin lesions was observed in all 11 cats treated with a combined therapy and in five of seven treated solely with azoles. Malassezia spp. overgrowth may represent a secondary cutaneous problem in allergic cats particularly in those presented for dermatological examination displaying greasy adherent brownish scales. The favourable response to treatment with antifungal treatments alone suggests that, as in dogs, Malassezia spp. may be partly responsible for both pruritus and cutaneous lesions in allergic cats.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17845619/