Full Professor of the Faculdade de Medicina Veterinária e Zootecnia da Universidade de São Paulo, Dermatology Service Av. Prof. Dr. Orlando Marques de Paiva, São Paulo
In the routine of a veterinary clinic, whichever region to be considered, dermatopathies constitute 30 to 40% of all cases attended. Included among them, in tropical or subtropical climates, are the intra or interspecies-transmitted dermatoses. This transmissibility is of major concern for owners, as this could possibly in the infection of exposed humans or of other animals in the household. Many of those potentially zoonotic diseases should be considered stigmatic. Furthermore, they frequently infect veterinary professionals, their assistants, pet store groomers etc. They are considered, hence, to be occupational diseases, generically denominated professional dermatoses (ergodermatoses). Among the dermatozoonoses of (zooanthroponotic, anthropozoonotic) that primarily affect the integumentary system, are those of viral (poxviruses), fungal (dermatophytosis, sporotrichosis), parasitical (scabies, leishmaniosis, larva migrans, pulicosis), bacterial (Staphylococcal infections) and traumatic (bite and scratch marks) etiologies. This lecture will discuss those most frequently found in veterinary clinics and hospitals throughout Central and South America--namely, sporotrichosis, dermatophytosis and scabies.
Dermatozoonosis of Fungal Etiology
Sporotrichosis
Also known as: Rose-thorn disease or rose-gardeners' disease, "maladie de vacance", miners/stonemason/seed´s men diseases.
Agent: Sporothrix schenckii (Schenck, 1898).
Incidence: Urban, worldwide, epizootic and epidemic (20th and 21st centuries) in Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) and in South Africa (gold mines) in the 19th century.
Rio de Janeiro (1998-2004) Nr. of cases: 759 human, 1,503 feline and 64 canine. Feline infection sources: 85% of dogs and 83% of cats.
Classification: Anthropozoonosis, saprozoonosis, professional dermatosis (ergodermatoses).
Susceptibility: Cats, dogs, horses, mules, men, e.g.
Skin lesions:
Solid formations (papules, nodules, gumma and verrucous lesions).
Tissue loss/replacement (scales, crusts, erosions and ulcers).
Lesion topography: head and thoracic limbs.
Symptoms: Rare in its initial phases. In severe cases: anorexia, weight loss, enlarged lymph nodes e prostration.
Epidemiology of diseased cats in Brazil: Male (65%); mean age 24 months (87% < 48 months); domestic or semi-domestic; mean evolution period--8 weeks (1-128 weeks); nr. of affected regions: 2 (25%), > 3 (40%); topography--head (57%), forelimbs (14%), mucosae (35%); extracutaneous symptoms (57%), respiratory symptoms (44%); concurrent retroviral infection: FIV (19.7%), FeLV (1.4%); FIV/FeLV (0.7%).
Transmission: Exposure to the soil, organic debris to rotting vegetables, to cats' claws (40%) and mouths (42%).
Diagnosis: Identification, patient history, examination: physical, dermatological and others "intra vitam" and "post-mortem") examinations positivity (histopathological--100%; culture positive--93.7%).
Differential diagnosis: Leishmaniosis, cryptococcosis, mycobacteriosis, pyoderma, neoplasia.
Treatment: Itraconazole (oral, 10mg/kg, SID).
Dermatophytosis
Also known as: Ringworm, tinea, mycosis, "pelada", "rabugem".
Agents: Microsporum canis, M. gypseum, T. mentagrophytes.
Incidence: In Brazil, feline (16-29% of all feline dermatopathies), canine and feline (6.4-13.4% of all dermatoses).
Classification: Anthropozoonosis, saprozoonosis, anthroponosis, professional dermatosis (ergodermatoses).
Susceptibility: Cats (healthy--carrier), dogs, horses, oxen, rodents and men.
Skin lesions:
Solid formations (papules, nodules)
Thickness variations (keratosis, lichenification)
Tissue loss/replacement (scales, crusts, erosions)
Color changes (erythema, hyperpigmentation, melanism)
Lesion morphology: Annular, nummular, target, polycyclic, serpiginous.
Lesion topography: Head, limbs, trunk.
Symptoms: Rare, pruritus (geophilic).
Epidemiology of the diseased:
|
Dogs (%)
n=40
|
Cats (n%)
n=36
|
Gender
|
|
|
--Male
|
47.5
|
54.0
|
Long hair coat
|
52.5
|
46.0
|
Breed definition
|
|
|
--Purebreed
|
75.0
(Yorkshire: 23%)
|
44.5
(Persian: 94%)
|
Age
|
|
|
--Average
|
23.0
|
20.5
|
--< 12m
|
65.0
|
66.5
|
Symptom
|
|
|
--Itching
|
50.0
|
11.0
|
Balda, AC & Larsson, CE. Dermatofitose em gatos e cães. HOVET / USP (1999-2001), MSc Thesis FMVZ / USP (2004)
Transmission: direct / indirect. Interspecies: 21.5% of exposed owners in Brazil.
Diagnosis: Identification, patient history, physical, dermatological and others examinations.
Method
|
Incidence (%)
|
Mycological
|
|
--Direct
|
87.5
|
--Grown
|
100.0
|
Wood´s Lamp
|
35.0-83.0
|
Histopathological
|
28.5
|
Differential diagnosis: Mange (demodicosis), dyskeratinization, scabies, trichotillomania, superficial pyoderma, miliary dermatitis.
Treatment:
Griseofulvin (P.O., 50 mg/kg SID, 6-8 weeks)
Itraconazole (P.O., 10 mg/kg SID, 4-6 weeks)
Terbinafine (P.O., 10-15 mg/kg SID, 4 weeks)
Ketoconazole 2% (topical)
Ketoconazole and chlorhexidine 2% (topical) chlorhexidine 3%(topical)
Benzoyl peroxide 2.5-3% (topical)
Selenium sulfide 2.5%(topical)
Iodine / iodophor(topical)
"If looks like ringworm, it is probably not! It is probably staphylococcal folliculitis" Scott et al., 2001
Dermatozoonosis of Parasitical Etiology
Canine and Feline Scabies
Also known as: sarcoptic mange, Red Mange.
Agent: Sarcoptes scabiei, Notoedres cati Incidence: Brazil
Canine--32% of all parasitical dermatitis
Feline--14-38% of all parasitical dermatitis
6% of feline dermatitis
Classification: Anthropozoonosis, professional dermatosis (ergodermatoses).
Susceptibility: Dog, cat and men.
Skin lesions:
Solid formations (papules, nodules)
Thickness alterations (keratosis, lichenification)
Tissue loss/replacement (scales, crusts, erosions)
Color changes (erythema, hyperpigmentation)
Lesion Morphology: Varied.
Lesion Topography: Head, neck, limbs.
Symptoms: Itching, itching and ... itching ("pruritus ferox"), emaciation, weight loss, enlarged lymph nodes.
Epidemiology of the diseased: Brazil (HOVET/USP 1984-2005).
Case reports: 44,561 cases (dogs--40,393, cats--4,168)
3,088 (6.9%) "scabies patients" (12.3 cases/month)
Canine scabies: 6.1%
Feline scabies: 15.3%
|
Dogs (%)
|
Cats (%)
|
Gender
|
|
|
--Male
|
53.0
|
58.7
|
Hair coat
|
|
|
--Long
|
73.0
|
20.0
|
--Short
|
27.0
|
80.0
|
Breed definition
|
58.3
|
22.3
|
--purebred
|
(Cocker--39.0
Poodle--36.0)
|
(Siamese--83.0
Persian--15.0)
|
Age
|
|
|
--< 12 months
|
88.0
|
65.0
|
Evolution
|
|
|
--< 3 months
|
77.0
|
80.5
|
Seasonality
|
"nihil"
|
"nihil"
|
Castro, R.C.C.& Larsson, C.E. Escabiose em cães e gatos. HOVET/USP. MSc Thesis FMVZ/USP (2005)
Transmission: direct / indirect. Interspecies: 28.3% of exposed owners in Brazil.
Diagnosis: identification, patient history, dermatological examination and laboratory procedures, owners symptoms and lesions.
|
Incidence (%)
|
Method
|
Dog
|
Cat
|
Skin scraping
|
73.0
|
88.0
|
Histopathological
|
6.0
|
...
|
Serology
|
70.0
|
...
|
Pinnal-pedal reflex
|
98.3
|
...
|
Differential diagnosis: dermatophytosis, allergic dermatitis, feline pemphigus foliaceus, dyskeratinization.
Treatment:
Ivermectin (P.O.; 300 mcg/kg SID; 14-day interval)
Selamectin (topical; 6 mcg/kg SID; 30-day interval)
Moxidectin 2.5% e imidacloprid 10% (topical; 0.1 mc/Kg SID; 30-day interval)
Benzyl benzoate 25% (for cats--NEVER!!)--topical
tetraethylthiuram 25%--topical
References
References are available upon request.