Small Animal Dermatology, 3rd edition

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chapter 44 Sporotrichosis........................................


DEFINITION/OVERVIEW


 Zoonotic fungal disease affecting the skin and lymphatics; may become systemic.


ETIOLOGY/PATHOPHYSIOLOGY


 Sporothrixspp. are saprophytes in soil, decomposing plants, peat moss, rose thorns,


and wood.


 Disease caused by direct inoculation into subcutaneous tissues of the thermally


dimorphic fungus with conversion from mycelial form to yeast form in mammalian
tissues.

 Described on all continents: most prevalent serotype differs by geographic location.


 S. schenckiiis a cryptic species with a high level of intraspecific DNA variability, lead-


ing to two or more species having been originally classified as a single species.


 Pathogenic serotypes within theSporothrixcomplex includeS.brasiliensis,S.schenckii


sensu stricto,S. globosa,S. mexicana,andS. luriei.


 Lesions in cats typically contain high fungal loads: yeast forms scarce in human and


canine lesions.


 Cats may be subclinical carriers as well as being the main zoonotic disseminators of


Sporothrixinfection.


 Cellular immunity is involved in disease resolution – severe systemic disease and high


fungal load are associated with increased expression of CD8+cells; localized, orga-
nized control of disease and low fungal load are associated with increased expression
of CD4+cells (cats); recent studies correlate CD8+release and subsequent activation
(by inflammasomes/caspase-1) of IL-1-beta with severity of lesions.

 Disease manifestation is dependent on species virulence; independent of coinfection


with feline retroviruses.


SIGNALMENT/HISTORY


Causes and Risk Factors


 Dogs: hunting dogs from puncture wounds associated with thorns or splinters.


Blackwell’s Five-Minute Veterinary Consult Clinical Companion: Small Animal Dermatology, Third Edition.
Karen Helton Rhodes and Alexander H. Werner.
©2018 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Published 2018 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.


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