Pruritic microbial skin disease Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 2 most common microbial infections causing pruritus?

A
  • Bacterial pyoderma (surface/superficial)
  • Malassezia dermatitis
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2
Q

When do skin commensals cause disease?

A
  • Compromise of cutaneous defences, e.g.
    • Mechanical damage to skin
    • Defects in skin barrier function
    • Changes to innate/acquired immunity
  • Increased microbial adherence (e.g. with canine atopic dermatitis (CAD)
  • Changes to skin microclimate
  • Changes to skin microbiome
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3
Q

What skin disease does dysbiosis often occur with?

A

Canine atopic dermatitis (CAD)
* Decreased bacterial/fungal diversity
* Increased proportion of Staph/Malassezia

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4
Q

What organism is the most common cause of pyoderma in cats and dogs?

A

S. pseudintermedius

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5
Q

Where are the bacteria located in surface pyodermas compared to superficial pyodermas?

A

Surface - bacteria proliferate on epidermal surface
Superficial - bacteria invade epidermis

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6
Q

What is the most common form of superficial pyoderma in dogs? What are other common examples?

A

Folliculitis

  • impetigo
  • exfoliative superficial pyoderma
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7
Q

Where does canine intertrigo mostly occur?

A

In moist warm environment of skin folds, e.g.
* Facial and tail folds
* Vulval folds
* Intertriginous (i.e. skin-skin frictional) areas, e.g. of obese animals

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8
Q

What is the most common form of surface pyoderma? What are other common ones?

A

Intertrigo

  • acute moist dermatitis (hot spots)
  • bacterial overgrowth syndrome
  • mucocutaneous pyoderma
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9
Q

Why does acute moist dermatitis occur?

A
  • Acute lesion caused by skin self-trauma
  • Triggered by any irritant (flea bite, classically)
  • Very rapid development of bacterial overgrowth – can -> to pyotraumatic folliculitis if not addressed rapidly (stop pruritus, cleanse and dry skin)
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10
Q

Describe bacterial overgrowth syndrome lesions

A

greasy, malodorous, erythematous, alopecia -> hyperpigmentation, lichenification

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11
Q

What clinical signs can you see with bacterial folliculitis?

A

Papules -> pustules - primary lesions but short-lived -> often present as secondary lesions
* Crusts
* Small epidermal collarettes – peripheral scale +/- central post-inflammatory pigmentation

Loss of hair from follicle
- multifocal patchy alopecia
- vague patchy thinning of hair
- thinning of undercoat

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12
Q

How does exfoliative superficial pyoderma present?

A
  • Rapidly-expanding erythematous rings with peripheral peeling (epidermal collarettes) – may coalesce -> large collarettes
  • Also central alopecia +/- hyperpigmentation
  • Often highly pruritic
    NB no preceding pustule/papule
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13
Q

What are the most common presentations of pyoderma in the cat?

A
  • Feline acne
  • Surface pyoderma superimposed on EGC lesions
  • Folliculitis
    • Miliary dermatitis (small crusted papules)
    • Larger crusts
    • Alopecia with minimal inflammation - d/d dermatophytosis, demodicosis (D cati)
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14
Q

What diagnostic test should you always do if pyoderma is on the d/d list?

A

Cytology
* always! - impression smear (direct or indirect) or stained acetate tape strip
* Perform on papules/pustules/erosions, skin under crust, under epidermal collarette rim
* NB Absence of surface bacteria does not rule out pyoderma – organisms may be within hair follicle

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15
Q

When should you undertake culture and sensitivity testing?

A
  • Superficial pyoderma unresponsive to initial empirical therapy
  • History of repeated antibiotic use
  • Previous isolation of a meticillin resistant Staphylococcus (MRS)
  • Rods seen on cytology
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16
Q

Where and how should you take your samples for a culture and sensitivity study?

A

Primary lesions – best, if lesions present
* Look for papules/pustule in groin axillae esp!
* Burst pustule with sterile needle, or gently remove top of papule with edge of microscope slide/back of scalpel blade
* direct swab of exudate

Secondary lesions
- Sample under crusts (if moist beneath) or under rim of collarette, using saline-moistened swab

If no primary or secondary lesions
* Small punch tissue biopsy
* Gently blot surface with alcohol swab to remove contamination and allow to dry – do not prep in normal manner
* Submit in sterile glass tube +/- spot of sterile saline

17
Q

What is the common approach to treating pyoderma?

A

Address infection - immediate priority!
* Surface pyoderma – always topical (chlrhexidine, fusidic acid for cocci and silver sulphadiazine for rods)
* Superficial pyoderma
* Topical alone whenever possible (chlorhexidine)
* Add systemic first tier antimicrobial drugs if severe or extensive (amoxiclav, clindamycin, TMPS, cefalexin)
* NB accurate dosing, target the specific organism, use narrow-spectrum drugs where possible

Use of antipruritic agents?
* Surface pyoderma – drugs to control pruritus (including corticosteroids) indicated
* Superficial pyoderma
* traditionally advised against concurrent use of any drug that may hamper the host’s immune response, especially corticosteroids.
* However, short course (e.g. 3-5 days) now considered acceptable in cases where underlying inflammatory process likely to be driving infection (e.g. pyoderma secondary to atopic flare).
* Deep pyoderma (identify through palpation of thickened skin) – drugs that may hamper host’s immune system (e.g. corticosteroids, oclacitinib) contraindicated

Address underlying disease - essential for long term resolution of secondary infection

18
Q

How does your treatment approach change between acute moist dermatitis and that with satellite lesions?

A

pyotraumatic dermatitis - a surface pyoderma

Treatment usually
* Clip lesions (under sedation/GA if painful)
* Treat with topical antimicrobial – e.g. chlorhexidine, fusidic acid*
* Control pruritus – corticosteroids* usually

*(in ‘Isaderm’)

BUT if satellite lesions present, infection may be deeper (pyotraumatic folliculitis/furunculosis) so avoid corticosteroids!

19
Q

What are risk factors for development of clinical MRS infections?

A
  • Previous antimicrobial therapy
  • Repeated visits to vet surgery
  • Invasive procedures
20
Q

How can you treat MRS infections?

A

Surface/superficial infections
* Topical therapy alone – as per meticillin-sensitive infections
* Avoid systemic antibiotics if at all possible (selects for more resistance!)

Deep infections
* Systemic antibiotics, using lowest EMA Category drug shown to be effective (NB never amoxyclav, even if test indicates susceptibility) – seek specialist advice if no susceptibility to authorized drugs
* Plus topical therapies

Strict hygiene measures in home and surgery are required, and owners need to be advised of zoonotic risk – advise they check with doctor as precaution. See
* Owner advice sheets MRSA & MRSP – excellent resources!
* BSAVA recommendations

Establish and address underlying cause!

21
Q

What are risk factors for Malassezia dermatitis?

A

Anatomical features (skin folds, pendulous lips, hairy feet) -> warm lipid-rich environment

Underlying disease (especially allergies, endocrinopathies, keratinisation disorders)
* Alter barrier function/lipids/humidity of skin
* Favour adhesion of organisms and ?predominance of more virulent strains

Breed – e.g. Bassets + Devon Rex cats with high normal mucosal populations

22
Q

What clinical signs are associated to Malassezia dermatitis?

A
  • Pruritus varies - mild to severe (NB severe pruritus may be seen with minimal lesions)
  • Initially erythema with greasy exudate, scale, crust -> lichenification, alopecia, hyperpigmentation
  • Focal/multifocal/generalised
  • Common sites: ears, lips, muzzle, i/dig skin, flexor surfaces, ventral neck/body, axilla, medial limbs, perineum!
  • +/- rancid malodour

A common trigger for flares of allergic skin disease

23
Q

How would you diagnose Malassezia dermatitis?

A

Cytology
* Stained acetate tape strip
* Direct/indirect impression smear if moist/waxy
* Peanut/snowman/footprint/Russian doll appearance – may be mixed with bacterial overgrowth
* May be clustered/adherent to keratinocytes (esp cats), so need to examine wide area
* No fixed number for significance – interpret in light of clinical signs - final diagnosis depends on response (clinical + cytological) to treatment

Culture, skin biopsy
- May identify organisms but not used routinely currently

24
Q

How is Malassezia dermatitis treated? How can it be prevented?

A
  • Reduce number of organisms
    • Topical treatment very effective - often aimed at Malassezia AND bacterial pyoderma - eg Miconazole/chlorhexidine shampoo, 2-4% chlorhexidine shampoo/foam, TrizEDTA/chlorhexidine wipes
    • Systemic treatment (Itraconazole / ketoconazole) if topical fails

Prevention - establish and treat the primary cause
- Often need regular treatment if primary cause cannot be fully controlled

25
Q

You have diagnosed a superficial pyoderma on the ventrum of a dog. What is the treatment of choice?
* Systemic amoxicillin-clavulanate
* Systemic clindamycin
* Topical 2-4% chlorhexidine shampoo
* Topical polymyxin B

A

Topical 2-4% chlorhexidine shampoo