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FUNGI



Dermatiaceous fungi

Microsporum canis alopecia and scaling lesions (Courtesy of Bristol BioMed Image Archive)
Ringworm in a dog (Courtesy of Bristol BioMed Image Archive)
Trichophyton mentagrophytes in a dog (Courtesy of Bristol BioMed Image Archive)
  • Caused by dermatophytes
    • Microsporum - zoophilic
    • Trichophyton - geophilic
    • Epidermophyton - anthropophilic
  • Common in many species, especially cats
  • Hot, humid environment predisposes and viable fungi peripherally
  • More common in young animals
  • Produce proteolytic enzymes to penetrate surface lipid
  • Fungal hyphae invade keratin -> break into arthrospores
  • Epidermal hyperplasia (hyperkeratosis, parakeratosis, acanthosis) and inflammation
  • Superficial perivascular dermatitis -> exocytosis (migration through epidermal layers) -> intracorneal microabscesses
  • Exocytosis -> folliculitis -> furunculosis
  • Highly variable lesions
  • Normal -> eruptive nodular -> pseudomycetoma -> onychomycosis
  • Grossly:
    • Circular or irregular lesion, may coalesce
    • Scaly to crusty patches
    • Alopecia due to broken hair shafts and hairs lost from inflammed follicles
    • Follicular papules and pustules
    • Peripheral red ring (ringworm) due to dead fungi in areas of inflammation at centre of lesions and viable fungi peripherally
  • Microscopically:
    • Perifolliculitis, folliculitis or furunculosis
    • Epidermal hyperplasia
    • Intracorneal microabscesses
    • Septate hyphae or spores may be found in stratum corneum and keratin of hair follicles