Back to Search Start Over

Survey on yeasts in mucosae of dogs with and without weakening pathologies

Authors :
GALUPPI, ROBERTA
FRACASSI, FEDERICO
CAPITANI, OMBRETTA
TAMPIERI, MARIA PAOLA
Garutti S.
Società Italiana di Parassitologia
Galuppi R.
Garutti S.
Fracassi F.
Capitani O.
Tampieri M.P.
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Litografia La Ducale Srl, 2014.

Abstract

In human medicine many studies point out as yeasts, commensals on mucosae, can became pathogens in course of immunodeficiency, chemotherapy, cortisone therapy, endocrinopathies (Bulacio et al 2012, J. Mycol. Med., 22: 348-353). Such risk factors were also suggested in Veterinary Medicine but, so far, only few studies about this topic were made (Tampieri et al 2008, Parassitologia, 50: 95; Bieganska et al., 2012, 18th congress ISHAM, p.177). In this paper, the yeast flora of oral, conjunctiva and rectal mucosae of dogs was examined, in relation to presence (“sick dogs”) or absence (“healthy dogs”) of predisposing factors such as endocrinopaty, neoplasy, cortisone therapy or other weakening pathologies. One hundred eight dogs (61 “healthy” and 47 “sick”) were examined; from each dog 4 swabs from oral, conjunctival and rectal mucosae were collected and inoculated in duplicate on Sabouraud Dextrose Agar (BBL) with 0.05g/ chloramphenicol (Sigma). The plates were incubated both at 25°C and 37°C ad observed daily for 7 days. The yeasts isolated were identified microscopically for Malassezia pachydermatis and with Api 20C AUX (Biomerieux Italia S.p.a, Firenze, Italy) and Dalmau plates on Yeast Morphology Agar DIFCO (Becton Dickinson Italia S.p.a, Milano, Italy) for the other yeasts. Yeasts were found in 83 dogs out of 108 examined (76.8%). M. pachydermatis was isolated in at least one sample from 78/108 dogs (73.2%), especially in rectal mucosae where also the major number of yeast species was present. Conversely, lowest yeasts isolation was from conjunctival swabs. The other yeasts isolated were: Rhodotorula spp (8.34%), Candida albicans (3.7%), C. glabrata (2.78%), Cryptococcus laurentii (1.85%), C. guilliermondii, C. parapsilosis, C. boidinii, Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Cr. albidus (0.92%). M. pachydermatis was found more frequently in healthy dogs (83.6%) compared to sick dogs (57.4%) (X2y = 6.18p>0.05). On the contrary, other yeasts were found more frequently in sick dogs (15.22%) than in healthy dogs (6.2%) (Fisher exact p

Subjects

Subjects :
dog
YEAST
mucosae

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......4094..be0c9e62ca0a5a5bc5675f39dc370240