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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Multiple crusting skin plaques linked to papillomavirus in a cat

By Munday, J S et al.·Published in New Zealand veterinary journal·2017·a Department of Pathobiology·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Multiple viral plaques with sebaceous differentiation associated with an unclassified papillomavirus type in a cat.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 15-year-old neutered male domestic short-haired cat was brought in because of several crusty plaques on his face, particularly near his left ear, nose, and right eye. These plaques didn't seem to bother him, but a biopsy revealed changes in the skin cells and the presence of a type of papillomavirus. This specific virus is linked to the unusual skin changes seen in the cat. While these feline viral plaques with sebaceous differentiation are not commonly reported, the findings suggest they are related to this unclassified virus. The cat's condition is unique, and further monitoring may be needed.

People also search for: cat skin plaques treatment · feline viral plaques symptoms · papillomavirus in cats

Abstract

CASE HISTORY AND CLINICAL FINDINGS A 15-year-old neutered male domestic short-haired cat was presented due to multiple 0.5-2 cm-diameter crusting plaques in the left preauricular region, over the bridge of nose, and in the right periocular region. The plaques did not appear to cause discomfort. HISTOPATHOLOGICAL FINDINGS Biopsy samples of four plaques were examined histologically. Three plaques consisted of well-demarcated foci of mild epidermal hyperplasia overlying markedly hyperplastic sebaceous glands. Approximately 60% of the hyperplastic cells contained a large cytoplasmic vacuole that ranged from being clear to containing prominent grey-blue fibrillar material. The fourth plaque was composed solely of epidermal hyperplasia, consistent with previous descriptions of feline viral plaques. MOLECULAR BIOLOGY Papillomavirus DNA was amplified from all four plaques using PCR. A single DNA sequence was amplified from the plaques with sebaceous differentiation. This sequence was identical to the FdPV-MY sequence previously suggested to be from a putative unclassified papillomavirus type. Felis catus papillomavirus type 2 sequences were amplified from the plaque typical of feline viral plaques. Immunohistochemistry to detect p16protein (p16) showed marked immunostaining throughout the hyperplastic epidermis and adnexal structures within the plaques with sebaceous differentiation. DIAGNOSIS Multiple feline viral plaques with variable sebaceous differentiation. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Feline viral plaques with sebaceous differentiation have not been previously reported in cats. The presence of unique cell changes within these lesions, the detection of an unclassified papillomavirus type, and the p16 immunostaining within these plaques suggest that they may have been caused by the papillomavirus that contains the FdPV-MY sequence.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28358996/