Treatment of Dermatophytoses Caused by Microsporum canis in Allouatta guariba Primates

Acta Scientiae Veterinariae

Endereço:
AV BENTO GONçALVES 9090
PORTO ALEGRE / RS
Site: http://www.ufrgs.br/actavet/
Telefone: (51) 3308-6964
ISSN: 16799216
Editor Chefe: [email protected]
Início Publicação: 31/12/1969
Periodicidade: Trimestral
Área de Estudo: Medicina Veterinária

Treatment of Dermatophytoses Caused by Microsporum canis in Allouatta guariba Primates

Ano: 2010 | Volume: 38 | Número: 4
Autores: Gleide Marsicano, Alessandra de Araújo Roll, Laerte Ferreiro, Andréia Spanamberg, Camila Duarte Penter, Juliane Nunes Hallal Cabral
Autor Correspondente: Gleide Marsicano | [email protected]

Palavras-chave: alouatta guariba, microsporum canis, fluconazole, dermatophytoses, primates

Resumos Cadastrados

Resumo Inglês:

Background: Dermatophytoses are cosmopolitan contagious mycoses of the skin and concern a wide range of mammals,
including man, and more rarely birds. These mycoses are rarely diagnosed in New World Primates. The most frequent tinea of
the subhuman Primates is microsporosis due to Microsporum canis or trichophytosis by Trichophyton mentagrophytes and T.
simii. The main clinical features are regular alopecia with erythema and squamosis, usually non-pruriginous although various
degree of inammation may modify this typical aspect. As a consequence, an accurate clinical examination, a good differential
diagnosis and laboratory analyses are required for a correct identification. Alouatta guariba are primates found from the
Amazon region up to the Argentina Norwest. Due to the population development and expansion of the urban perimeters these
animals are loosing their space in their own natural habitat and being exposed to more closed relationship with domestic
animals and humans. This report contains five cases of dermatophytoses caused by Microsporum canis in Alouatta sp., which
were treated in a private clinic in Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil.
Case: Five females of Alouatta guariba with aged between 2 and 8 months old were admitted in a private veterinary clinic
(Toca dos Bichos, Porto Alegre). Each of them had different injuries (electric chock, death of the parent due gun shot,
aggression between families and dog bite) and were admitted in different dates. All five primates were presented with intense
pruritus after 7 or 10 days of admission. At physical examination lesions characteristic of dermatophytoses were found. To
establish a definitive diagnosis it was collected fur and skin and the material was send to the Mycology Laboratory of the
Faculdade de Veterinária, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil. The fungic culture
was positive for Microsporum canis. The treatment established was fluconazole, 18 mg/kg/day PO, mixed in smashed bananas.
After two weeks of treatment, a sensitive clinic improvement was seen in all primates, characterized by diminishing of pruritus
and alopecic areas. At 30 days of treatment the animals had no clinical signs of lesions and had their fur completely re-grown.
The medication was administered for more 15 days, totalizing 45 days of treatment, at which time the animals were considered
cured. The primates were monitored for more 30 days after the last dose of fluconazole.
Discussion: Case reports on the isolation of Microsporum canis in non-human primates, mainly in New World Primates, are
very rare in the Brazilian literature. It is necessary more cohesive approach to nonhuman primate (NHP) dermatology, without
relying on assumptions that it is similar to other veterinary disease. Mycological culture remains the gold standard for the
diagnosis of animal dermatophytosis and the only method for the phenotypic identication of dermatophyte species. The
fluconazole treatment proved to be highly effective, as the animals were all cured and there was no side effects related. This
case report proves the importance of a correct mycological diagnostic in free-range animals as an effective treatment in
Alouatta guariba.Background: Dermatophytoses are cosmopolitan contagious mycoses of the skin and concern a wide range of mammals,
including man, and more rarely birds. These mycoses are rarely diagnosed in New World Primates. The most frequent tinea of
the subhuman Primates is microsporosis due to Microsporum canis or trichophytosis by Trichophyton mentagrophytes and T.
simii. The main clinical features are regular alopecia with erythema and squamosis, usually non-pruriginous although various
degree of inammation may modify this typical aspect. As a consequence, an accurate clinical examination, a good differential
diagnosis and laboratory analyses are required for a correct identification. Alouatta guariba are primates found from the
Amazon region up to the Argentina Norwest. Due to the population development and expansion of the urban perimeters these
animals are loosing their space in their own natural habitat and being exposed to more closed relationship with domestic
animals and humans. This report contains five cases of dermatophytoses caused by Microsporum canis in Alouatta sp., which
were treated in a private clinic in Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil.
Case: Five females of Alouatta guariba with aged between 2 and 8 months old were admitted in a private veterinary clinic
(Toca dos Bichos, Porto Alegre). Each of them had different injuries (electric chock, death of the parent due gun shot,
aggression between families and dog bite) and were admitted in different dates. All five primates were presented with intense
pruritus after 7 or 10 days of admission. At physical examination lesions characteristic of dermatophytoses were found. To
establish a definitive diagnosis it was collected fur and skin and the material was send to the Mycology Laboratory of the
Faculdade de Veterinária, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil. The fungic culture
was positive for Microsporum canis. The treatment established was fluconazole, 18 mg/kg/day PO, mixed in smashed bananas.
After two weeks of treatment, a sensitive clinic improvement was seen in all primates, characterized by diminishing of pruritus
and alopecic areas. At 30 days of treatment the animals had no clinical signs of lesions and had their fur completely re-grown.
The medication was administered for more 15 days, totalizing 45 days of treatment, at which time the animals were considered
cured. The primates were monitored for more 30 days after the last dose of fluconazole.
Discussion: Case reports on the isolation of Microsporum canis in non-human primates, mainly in New World Primates, are
very rare in the Brazilian literature. It is necessary more cohesive approach to nonhuman primate (NHP) dermatology, without
relying on assumptions that it is similar to other veterinary disease. Mycological culture remains the gold standard for the
diagnosis of animal dermatophytosis and the only method for the phenotypic identication of dermatophyte species. The
fluconazole treatment proved to be highly effective, as the animals were all cured and there was no side effects related. This
case report proves the importance of a correct mycological diagnostic in free-range animals as an effective treatment in
Alouatta guariba.