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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with intestinal pythiosis treated by surgery chemo

By Schmiedt, Chad W et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2012·Department of Small Animal Medicine and Surgery, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Treatment of intestinal pythiosis in a dog with a combination of marginal excision, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 1.5-year-old mixed-breed dog was brought to the vet after a month of not eating, vomiting, diarrhea, and losing weight. The vet found thickening in the intestines and diagnosed the dog with a rare intestinal infection caused by Pythium insidiosum. Initial treatment with antifungal medications didn’t work, so the vet performed surgery to remove the affected part of the intestine and then gave the dog a special vaccine along with continued medication. After a lot of supportive care, the dog fully recovered and returned to a healthy weight two years later.

People also search for: dog vomiting and diarrhea · Pythium infection treatment · dog weight loss after surgery · intestinal surgery recovery in dogs

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION: A 1.5-year-old mixed-breed dog was examined because of a 1-month history of anorexia, vomiting, diarrhea, and weight loss. CLINICAL FINDINGS: The dog was very thin on physical examination (body condition score, 3/9). Results of all diagnostic tests were within reference limits except intestinal thickening and lymphadenopathy were identified on abdominal ultrasound examination. During exploratory laparotomy, thickening at the ileocecal-colic junction and within the transverse colon and mesenteric lymphadenopathy were identified, and the ileocecal-colic junction was resected. Histopathologic evaluation of the ileocecal-colic junction and full-thickness biopsy specimens from other sites as well as results of a serum ELISA were diagnostic for gastrointestinal Pythium insidiosum infection. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: Pythiosis was initially treated medically with administration of itraconazole and terbinafine by mouth, but the colonic lesion was progressive with this regimen. Two months after diagnosis, a subtotal colectomy was performed; marginal excision (0.6 cm) was obtained at the aboral margin. The dog was treated with 3 doses of a pythiosis vaccine beginning approximately 2 weeks after surgery and was continued on itraconazole and terbinafine for 5 months. Parenteral and enteral nutrition as well as considerable general supportive care were required postoperatively. Six months after treatment, the dog had a normal serum ELISA titer. Two years after treatment, the dog had returned to preoperative weight and was clinically normal. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: This patient had an unusually positive therapeutic response to chronic, extensive, marginally excised gastrointestinal pythiosis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22812473/