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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Fungal sinus infection after brain surgery in three dogs

By Pilkington, Ed J et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2022·Royal Veterinary College, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Sinonasal mycosis following transfrontal craniotomy in three dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Three dogs developed chronic nasal discharge and nosebleeds after having surgery to remove brain tumors. A CT scan showed signs of severe nasal and sinus infection, and tests confirmed that a fungal infection caused by Aspergillus was present. The dogs were treated with surgery to remove the infection and antifungal medications, which helped initially, but the symptoms returned after a few months. Two of the dogs were still alive more than 10 months later, while one dog had to be euthanized due to seizures.

People also search for: dog nasal discharge after surgery · dog nosebleed treatment · fungal infection in dogs

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION: Three dogs were presented for investigation of chronic nasal discharge and epistaxis 141, 250, and 357 days after undergoing transfrontal craniotomy to treat an intracranial meningioma (2 dogs) or a meningoencephalocele (1 dog). CLINICAL FINDINGS: CT findings were consistent with destructive rhinitis and frontal sinusitis in all 3 dogs, with results of histologic examination and fungal culture of samples obtained during frontal sinusotomy confirming mycotic infection. Frontal sinusotomy revealed fungal plaques covering a combination of bone and residual surgical tissue adhesive at the site of the previous craniotomy in all 3 dogs. Aspergillus spp were identified in all 3 dogs, and Chrysosporium sp was also identified in 1 dog. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: Surgical curettage was followed by antifungal treatment (topical clotrimazole in 2 dogs and oral itraconazole for 3 months in 1 dog). Nasal discharge improved in the short-term but recurred in all dogs 99, 118, and 110 days after frontal sinusotomy. One dog received no further treatment, 1 dog received an additional 8.5 months of oral itraconazole treatment, and 1 dog underwent 2 additional surgical debridement procedures. At last follow-up, 2 dogs were alive 311 and 481 days after frontal sinusotomy; the third dog was euthanized because of status epilepticus 223 days after frontal sinusotomy. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Sinonasal mycosis should be considered as a potential complication in dogs developing persistent mucopurulent nasal discharge, intermittent epistaxis, and intermittent sneezing following transfrontal craniotomy. The pathophysiology may be multifactorial, and potential risk factors, including use of surgical tissue adhesive in the frontal sinus, require further investigation.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34986118/