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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Nocardiosis infections in cattle mastitis and dog skin cases

By Ribeiro, Márcio Garcia et al.·Published in Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo·2008·Departamento de Higiene Veterin&#xe1, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Nocardiosis: an overview and additional report of 28 cases in cattle and dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A dog with skin lesions and pneumonia was diagnosed with nocardiosis, an infection caused by Nocardia bacteria. This condition was often seen in dogs that also had distemper virus, which can weaken their immune system. The most effective treatments included antibiotics like sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim, amikacin, and ceftiofur, which worked well against the bacteria. However, some strains showed resistance to multiple antibiotics, making treatment more challenging. With proper care and the right medications, affected dogs can recover from this serious infection.

People also search for: dog skin lesions treatment · pneumonia in dogs · nocardiosis in dogs · antibiotic resistance in dogs · distemper virus in dogs

Abstract

Phenotypic characteristics, antimicrobial susceptibility profile, and clinical-epidemiological features of 28 Nocardia strains isolated from 19 cases of bovine mastitis, eight cutaneous-subcutaneous lesions and one case of pneumonia in dogs were evaluated. Microbiological, biochemical, cytological and scanning electron microscopy methods were used in diagnosis. Nocardia asteroides type IV, Nocardia otitidiscaviarum,Nocardia nova (type III) and Nocardia farcinica (type V) were isolated from bovine milk, bronchial lavage and/or cutaneous-subcutaneous abscesses in dogs. Nocardial bovine mastitis was diagnosed predominantly in clinical cases, in dairy herds with poor environmental hygienic conditions between milking and inappropriate intramammary therapy. Canine nocardiosis was observed commonly in animals co-infected with distemper virus. Sulphamethoxazole-trimethoprim (92.8%), amikacin (92.8%) and ceftiofur (92.8%) were the most effective drugs in 28 isolates. Multiple drug resistance to three or more and five or more antimicrobials was observed in ten (35.7%) and three (10.7%) strains, respectively, predominantly with use of cloxaxillin, cefoperazone and ampicillin. The species (type) classification, clinical-epidemiological characteristics, diagnosis, multiple-drug resistance and public health considerations in Nocardia strains isolated from cattle and dogs in Brazil are discussed, with special reference to report of bovine mastitis by N. otitidiscaviarum by first time in Brazil and the similarity between Nocardia species isolated from human and animal origin.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18516465/