Small Animal Dermatology, 3rd edition

(Tina Sui) #1

516 DISEASES/DISORDERS


 Feline leprosy syndrome:
Multiple drug oral therapy recommended
Clofazamine: 25–50 mg/cat PO q24h or rifampin 10–15 mg/kg PO q24h or clar-


ithromycin 62.5–125 mg/cat PO q24h with pradofloxacin 3 mg/kg PO q24h
Doxycycline: 5–7.5 mg/kg PO q24h
Amikacin: 10–15 mg/kg subcutaneously q24h.

 Canine leproid granuloma:
Doxycycline: 5 mg/kg PO BID
Rifampin: 10–15 mg/kg PO q24h with clarithromycin 7.5–12.5 mg/kg PO BID to


TID.


 Systemic nontuberculous mycobacteriosis:
In vitrosensitivity testing may be used to choose chemotherapy for these cases;


antibiotics reported to be effective against various isolates are macrolides, sul-
fonamides, tetracyclines, aminoglycosides, and fluoroquinolones
Anti-TB drugs are not generally effective
Multiple drug oral therapy recommended
Fluoroquinolone antibiotics, trimethoprim-sulfonamides, aminoglycosides,

tetracyclines, and clarithromycin are useful for some individual isolates; long-
term therapy should be based on sensitivity testing
Treatment should be continued for 2–6 months
Relapses upon cessation of treatment or during the course of treatment are

common.


COMMENTS


Client Education/Prognosis


 Tuberculosis: guarded but in reality, currently undefined because experience with


modern drugs that are better tolerated for long courses is limited.


 Feline leprosy: guarded to poor for syndrome 1; fair for syndrome 2, especially if


lesions are amenable to surgical excision.


 Canine leproid granuloma: prognosis is good.


 Subcutaneous and systemic nontuberculous infections: relapses are common, but


aggressive surgical approaches and multiple drug therapy may improve the outlook
over what is reported in the literature.

Patient Monitoring


 Antituberculosis and antileprosy drugs: examine at least monthly; monitor for


anorexia and weight loss.


 Hepatotoxicity: rifampin, clarithromycin, clofazamine; monitor liver enzymes


monthly.


 Nephrotoxicity: amikacin; monitor urinalysis and renal chemistries weekly.


 Gastrointestinal adverse effects: clofazamine, doxycycline.


 Instruct owners to report cutaneous lesions immediately.

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