Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with brain fungal granuloma treated successfully with surgery
By Bentley, R Timothy et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2011·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Successful management of an intracranial phaeohyphomycotic fungal granuloma in a dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 12-month-old male Boxer was brought to the vet with serious neurological symptoms due to a fungal infection in his brain. Tests revealed a fungal granuloma caused by Cladophialophora, which required surgery to remove the infected tissue. After surgery, the dog was treated with antifungal medications, fluconazole and voriconazole, for a total of 14 months. Thankfully, he showed excellent recovery, with no signs of the infection returning during follow-up imaging and tests.
People also search for: Boxer dog neurological symptoms · dog brain fungal infection treatment · fluconazole for dogs
Abstract
CASE DESCRIPTION: A 12-month-old castrated male Boxer was examined because of signs of acute, progressive intracranial disease. CLINICAL FINDINGS: Cytologic and histologic findings were consistent with an intracranial fungal granuloma in the right cerebral hemisphere. Fungal culture yielded a Cladophialophora sp. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: The granuloma was surgically debulked to remove infected brain tissue and the avascular purulent core. Postoperatively, the patient was treated with fluconazole (2.3 mg/kg [1 mg/lb], PO, q 12 h) for 4 months, followed by voriconazole (3.4 mg/kg [1.5 mg/lb], PO, q 12 h) for a further 10 months. The outcome was considered excellent on the basis of resolution of neurologic signs and a lack of evidence of recurrence of the granuloma during magnetic resonance imaging and CSF analysis 8 months after surgery. Magnetic resonance imaging and CSF analysis 9 weeks after administration of antifungal medications was discontinued (16 months after surgery) confirmed resolution. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Intracranial phaeohyphomycosis in small animals is rare and is most commonly associated with Cladophialophora infection. Phaeohyphomycosis frequently causes a focal granuloma, whereas other fungal infections typically cause diffuse meningoencephalitis. In all previous reports of phaeohyphomycosis of the CNS in dogs, treatment has been limited to medical management with conventional antifungal drugs and had failed to prevent death. The present report suggested that combined management of granulomas with surgery and newer triazole medications such as voriconazole may represent a novel strategy that improves the prognosis for this disease.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21838585/