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Disseminated invasive aspergillosis caused by <i>Aspergillus felis</i> in a cat

Catherine Anne Cormack, Shannon L. Donahoe, Jessica Talbot, Julia A. Beatty, Vanessa R. Barrs

2021Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A 2-year-old male desexed Ragdoll cat with a 1-year history of sneezing and nasal discharge presented with a large subcutaneous cervical mass, identified as the right medial retropharyngeal lymph node on computed tomography (CT). A right orbital mass, destructive sino-nasal cavity disease and multiple pulmonary nodules were also identified. Aspergillus felis was cultured from the lymph node. After treatment with posaconazole and liposomal amphotericin B the lymph node enlargement and orbital mass resolved but left frontal sinus involvement and pulmonary lesions persisted despite additional caspofungin therapy. The cat was euthanized 14 months after diagnosis with dysphagia and chronic progressive exophthalmos. A meningeal granuloma with intravascular fungal hyphae was identified at post-mortem and A felis was cultured from the left frontal sinus and a right retrobulbar fungal granuloma. This case demonstrates that disseminated disease is a possible sequel to invasive fungal rhinosinusitis caused by A felis in cats.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAspergillosisPathologyFelisBronchiectasisMucormycosisSinus (botany)CaspofunginLymph nodeExophthalmosZygomycosisAmphotericin BDermatologySurgeryLungCATSInternal medicineAntifungalImmunologyBiologyGenusBotanyAntifungal resistance and susceptibilityInfectious Diseases and MycologyFungal Infections and Studies
Disseminated invasive aspergillosis caused by <i>Aspergillus felis</i> in a cat | Litcius