Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Eye problems in cats with systemic sporotrichosis
By Freitas, Henrique M et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2023·Veterinary Medicine Department, Brazil·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Ocular lesions in cats diagnosed with systemic sporotrichosis.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 274 cats diagnosed with systemic sporotrichosis (a fungal infection) were examined for eye problems. Out of these, 63 cats showed signs of ocular issues, including increased eye discharge, conjunctivitis (inflammation of the eye), and blepharoconjunctivitis (inflammation of the eyelids and conjunctiva). The study highlighted that cats with these eye symptoms often tested positive for the fungus, suggesting that sporotrichosis should be considered when cats show eye inflammation, especially in areas where the infection is common. Treatment for the underlying fungal infection helped address the eye issues in affected cats.
People also search for: cat eye discharge treatment · cat conjunctivitis causes · systemic sporotrichosis in cats
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To describe the most common ocular lesions and demonstrate the frequency of ophthalmic involvement in a group of cats with systemic sporotrichosis. ANIMALS STUDIED: Two hundred seventy-four cats diagnosed with systemic sporotrichosis. The inclusion criteria included previous positive cytopathological examination, histopathological examination, or fungal culture. PROCEDURES: In a prospective case-control study, 274 cats diagnosed with systemic sporotrichosis underwent ophthalmic evaluation and received treatment for systemic sporotrichosis. Of these animals, 63 had ocular abnormalities which were recorded, and conjunctivitis was scored from 0 to 5. Diagnostic techniques utilized included fungal culture, as well as cytopathological (10 eyes; 10 cats), and histopathological examination of the palpebral conjunctiva and eyes (2 eyes). RESULTS: Cytopathological and histopathological examination of the conjunctiva, as well as fungal culture, proved to be important tests for the detection of Sporothrix sp. Five cats without the evidence of ophthalmic abnormalities also had a positive fungal culture. The identified ocular lesions in animals with systemic sporotrichosis included increased serous discharge (79 eyes; 53 cats), blepharoconjunctivitis (33 eyes; 25 cats), conjunctivitis (39 eyes, 20 cats), blepharitis (9 eyes; 8 cats), uveitis (5 eyes; 3 cats), and Florida keratopathy-like lesions (2 eyes; 1 cat). CONCLUSION: Sporotrichosis should be considered a differential diagnosis for conjunctivitis and blepharoconjunctivitis, especially in endemic areas. Fungal culture and cytopathology of ocular discharge and histopathological examinations of the conjunctiva are important for the diagnosis of ophthalmic sporotrichosis, although not all cats underwent laboratory testing in this study. Ocular discharge could be a source of contagion transmission.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35960710/