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Diagnostic Exercise: Severe Bilaterally Symmetrical Alopecia in a Horse

Authors :
Philip J. Johnson
Dae Young Kim
David A. Senter
Source :
Veterinary Pathology. 48:1216-1220
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2011.

Abstract

A 9-year-old Tennessee Walking Horse gelding was presented for diagnosis of the cause of extensive alopecia. Complete hair loss was noted over the head, neck, shoulder, thigh, and proximal limbs, but the trunk, distal limbs, pelvic area, mane, and tail were unaffected. The alopecic areas were visually noninflammatory with no exudate or crust except on the shoulder and along the back, where multifocal patchy areas of alopecia with scales and crust were evident. The horse was slightly pruritic. Microscopically, the hair bulbs, inner and outer root sheaths of inferior segments, and perifollicular regions were infiltrated by small to moderate numbers of small lymphocytes. Similar inflammation was occasionally evident in isthmus follicular walls as well as some apocrine glands. No sebaceous glands were affected. Immunohistochemistry confirmed that the small lymphocytes were CD3+ T lymphocytes. The epidermis from the skin with scale and crusts along the horse’s back exhibited mild to moderate hyperplasia, mild lymphocytic exocytosis, mild eosinophilic dermatitis, and diffuse parakeratosis with numerous budding yeasts, consistent with Malassezia spp. The final disease diagnosis was made as alopecia areata with Malassezia dermatitis. Alopecia areata could be a contributing underlying factor for Malassezia dermatitis.

Details

ISSN :
15442217 and 03009858
Volume :
48
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Veterinary Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........850e4b5a848a3a60cb24600e8d99d646
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0300985810396103