Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Topical treatment success for sinonasal aspergillosis in dogs
By Belda, Beatriz et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2018·Department of Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Sinonasal aspergillosis: Outcome after topical treatment in dogs with cribriform plate lysis.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
Nine dogs with sinonasal aspergillosis (a fungal infection in the nose) and damage to the cribriform plate (a bone in the skull) were treated with topical antifungal medications, despite concerns that this could lead to serious complications. After treatment, four of the dogs remained healthy for up to 684 days without any neurological issues, although one dog with a history of seizures had a seizure two months later. The dogs were discharged from the hospital without major problems shortly after treatment. This suggests that topical therapy can be safe and effective even in cases where there is significant bone damage.
People also search for: dog nasal infection treatment · sinonasal aspergillosis in dogs · dog seizure after treatment · antifungal medication for dogs · cribriform plate damage in dogs
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cribriform lysis has been considered a contraindication for topical treatment of sinonasal aspergillosis (SNA) because of concerns about drug extravasation with resultant neurologic signs or death. OBJECTIVE/HYPOTHESIS: To describe dogs with SNA and cribriform plate lysis treated with topical antifungal medications. Our hypothesis was that the conventional dogma that topical therapy should be avoided in these cases is incorrect. ANIMALS: Nine client-owned dogs with SNA and lysis of the cribriform plate, lysis of the floor of a frontal sinus or both detected by computed tomography (CT). METHODS: A retrospective review of medical records was performed. Dogs that met inclusion criteria (ie, SNA confirmed by at least 1 laboratory test, braincase affected on CT, and topical treatment applied) were included. Size of lesions, ancillary diagnostic test results, topical therapy, and adjuvant PO treatments were recorded. Outcome was determined by phone calls. RESULTS: Four dogs were alive at the time of the manuscript submission with follow-up ranging from 188 to 684 days without neurological signs observed. All dogs were discharged without major complication 1-7 days postoperatively. One dog that had presented with a history of seizures experienced seizure activity 2 months after treatment. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Topical therapy did not result in complications in these dogs in which lytic regions as large as 16 × 22 mmwere noted. Sinonasal aspergillosis associated lysis of the cribriform plate; lysis of the floor of a frontal sinus or both detected on CT is not necessarily a contraindication to topical therapy.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29957889/