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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog skin infections linked to Corynebacterium bacteria and treatment

By Boynosky, Nicole Ann & Stokking, Laura B·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2015·From the Dermatology Department·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Retrospective Evaluation of Canine Dermatitis Secondary to Corynebacterium spp.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with skin problems caused by a type of bacteria called Corynebacterium auriscanis were treated to see how effective different antibiotics would be. Most of the dogs showed improvement after being given doxycycline, even though the bacteria were resistant to other antibiotics they had been on. This suggests that Corynebacterium auriscanis can sometimes cause skin infections in dogs and may not respond to standard treatments. The dogs were rechecked 2-8 weeks later, and the bacteria were either gone or significantly reduced.

People also search for: dog skin infection treatment · doxycycline for dog dermatitis · Corynebacterium in dogs

Abstract

Corynebacterium species are considered nonpathogenic in canine dermatitis; however, potential clinical significance has been demonstrated in canine otitis externa and from a dog bite wound in a human. Objectives of this study were to identify the predominant Corynebacterium species present in lesions of canine dermatitis, assess pathogenic role, determine antimicrobial susceptibility, and evaluate clinical response. Of 37 isolates identified as Corynebacterium, 31 were Corynebacterium auriscanis . Most Corynebacterium isolates were susceptible to chloramphenicol (97%), tetracyclines (92%), and amikacin (89%); isolate susceptibilities to &#x3b2;-lactams, trimethoprim-sulfonamides, and fluoroquinolones were <50%. Most cultures grew mixed populations of bacteria; C. auriscanis was the only organism isolated in three patients. At recheck, 2-8 wk after initial presentation, pleomorphic rods were absent or significantly decreased in all patients. Two of three C. auriscanis isolates were obtained in pure culture and were evaluable, meaning patient had an initial exam and recheck examination. Both patients were already on antimicrobials to which C. auriscanis was resistant in vitro. Both improved after doxycycline administration. C. auriscanis may act as an opportunistic pathogen in canine dermatitis and may not respond to antimicrobial therapy based on susceptibilities for other organisms in mixed infections. Occasionally, Corynebacterium isolated alone may be pathogenic.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26535455/