Infectious disease in shelters and foster homes: ringworm - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Infectious disease in shelters and foster homes: ringworm

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M. canis. Greater zoonotic potential. Much more readily spread ... Most M. canis will grow within 10 days tentative negative at that point. Identification ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Infectious disease in shelters and foster homes: ringworm


1
Infectious disease in shelters and foster homes
ringworm
  • Kate F. Hurley, DVM, MPVM
  • Shelter Medicine Program
  • Center for Companion Animal Health
  • University of California, Davis
  • www.sheltermedicine.com

2
What is different about managing ringworm in a
population?
  • Screening is a big deal a missed lesion can be
    very, very costly
  • Treatment has to be effective it must work fast
    and protect the environment
  • Confirmation of cure is critical a missed
    fungus can be very, very costly
  • Decontamination must be successful future
    exposure of naïve cats is inevitable

3
Why does it matter so much?
  • Human health risk ethical, P.R. and liability
    issue
  • Treatment is relatively expensive, labor
    intensive and prolonged
  • Long term contamination can cripple a shelter or
    foster home

4
Time costs
Which one is easier to find a home for?
5
Time costs
What happens when all the cages are full?
6
The bottom line
  • We need to keep ringworm from getting in to
    feline populations
  • If it gets in, we need to deal with it as rapidly
    and effectively as possible while protecting the
    rest of the population
  • We need to keep ringworm from getting out to
    adopters homes

7
Who are the players?
  • M. canis
  • Greater zoonotic potential
  • Much more readily spread
  • Trichophyton mentagrophytes
  • M. gyspeum

8
What pre-disposes to ringworm?
  • Being a kitten
  • Compromised skin
  • Trauma, allergies, parasites, matting
  • Poor grooming habits
  • Long hair, stress, matted hair coat, URI,
    e-collar
  • Compromised immune system
  • FeLV, FIV, steroids, pregnancy
  • High risk environment

9
Sitting duck
10
Classic presentations
11
What else does it look like?
  • Focal or multifocal
  • Milliary Dermatitis
  • Eosinophilic Plaques
  • Indolent Lip Ulcers
  • Pinnae Alopecia
  • Chin acne
  • Paronychia
  • Stud tail
  • Granulomatous lesions

12
What else does it look like?
  • Over-grooming
  • Shedding
  • Hair loss
  • Pruritus (or not)
  • Crusting and Scaling
  • Erythema
  • Comedones

13
Woods lamp
Dang!
Dang!!
  • Correct wavelength
  • Plug-in, not battery
  • Dark room
  • Ideally
  • 10 minute warm up
  • 5 minute exam
  • Positive very suspicious
  • Watch out for tetracyline, KMR, others
  • Negative Not ruled out

Busted!
14
Fungal culture why?
  • Screening tool
  • For all?
  • Lesions and high risk?
  • Diagnostic tool
  • Treatment guidance
  • Confirmation of cure
  • Confirmation of cleaning

15
In-house fungal culture
  • Cost effective
  • Allows earlier diagnosis
  • Allows assessment of degree of infection
  • Allows creative culturing of environment

16
Fungal culture collection
  • Wipe cat with damp cloth to remove coat
    contaminants
  • Fresh toothbrush in package
  • Pluck 2nd choice for suspect lesions
  • At least 30 strokes
  • Especially face, inside pinnae, around nail beds,
    lesions
  • Swiffer? for environment
  • Cut into small sections, wipe until visibly dirty
  • Individual labeled baggies if multiple samples
  • Avoid heat exposure during transport

17
Fungal culture details
  • Room temperature media
  • Plate style preferred
  • Press firmly but not so much that culture is
    disrupted
  • Press Swiffer? firmly numerous times
  • Incubate at 75º- 85º F in the dark with humidity
    source
  • Examine daily until growth or for 21 days
  • Most M. canis will grow within 10 days
    tentative negative at that point

18
Identification
  • False negatives and positives possible with red
    color change
  • Tape prep
  • Lactophenol blue on slide
  • Tape on colony
  • Tape on slide
  • Resources for microscopic ID

19
Definitive diagnosis
20
Risk assessment for exposed
  • Baseline sanitation level?
  • Degree of exposure?
  • Evidence of spread?
  • Ideally toothbrush culture all at risk
  • Pathogen score to identify treatment candidates

21
P Score 1 Less than four colonies
  • Probable environmental contamination
  • Careful exam
  • Repeat culture
  • Lime sulfur dip
  • Probably okay to place for adoption while
    awaiting second culture results

Dust Mop Syndrome
22
P score 2 4-9 colonies
  • Super careful visual and Woods lamp exam
  • Inside pinnae, face, chin, tail, top and bottom
    of feet
  • If suspect lesions, treat as infected
  • If not, re-culture, dip and go as with P score
    of 1
  • Hold until 2nd culture negative to be extra
    careful

23
P score 3 initiate treatment for sure
RATS!
24
Lime sulfur dip
  • Top priority in order to reduce environmental
    contamination
  • Sufficient as sole treatment in many cases
  • Optimally, combine with systemic

25
Lime sulfur details
  • Use 8 concentration
  • Twice weekly if at all possible
  • Okay in pregnant and nursing cats, kittens gt 2-3
    weeks old
  • Wipe nursing moms, keep kittens warm
  • E-collar afterward may not be necessary

26
Lime sulfur application
  • Do not pre-wet
  • Pesticide sprayer
  • Powder first, then water
  • Keep close to cat
  • Or, hold by feet and dunk
  • Sponge dip on face, nose and ears

27
The prophylactic dunk
For my own good, you say?
28
Systemic treatment
  • Speeds recovery in all
  • Itraconazole drug of choice
  • Fluconazole 2nd choice (10 mgs/kg)
  • Terbinafine (Lamasil?) works but is costly and
    may require higher than published dose
  • Higher risk and/or less effective Griseofulvin
    and ketoconazole

Especially important for generalized ringworm or
immunosuppressed
29
Itraconazole
  • Get compounded, divide into capsules, or mix into
    food or butter
  • OK in kittens gt 3 weeks
  • Remember to adjust dose as kittens grow
  • Avoid in pregnant queens
  • Adverse effects GI, hepatoxicity

100 mg capsules being split into 4 25 mg capsules
30
To clip or not to clip?
  • Usually not necessary may temporarily worsen
    lesions
  • Consider in nursing moms, long haired, unkempt,
    unable to groom, or coat that is unmanageable
    after dipping
  • Be careful to avoid clipper burn
  • Bag hair and dont use the surgery clippers!

31
Some things not to use
  • Ineffective
  • Lufenuron
  • Chlorhexidine alone
  • Locally applied topical ointments
  • Potentially toxic
  • Ketoconazole in cats
  • Not legal
  • Enilconazole

Alas, not the magic bullet
32
Verifying cure
  • Effective treatment fungal cure prior to
    clinical cure
  • Ineffective treatment clinical cure prior to
    fungal cure
  • Bottom line need to verify fungal cure
  • 3 consecutive negative cultures, one week apart
    (can use only 2 if treat with lime sulfur plus
    itraconazole)
  • Begin after week one of treatment

33
Infection control during treatment
  • Immediate dip to reduce risk
  • In home, limit access until 2 weeks treatment
  • Isolation and cat-hair control
  • Separate clothing, supplies
  • Daily bedding wash in hot water, bleach, dryer
  • Written directions in shelter

34
What kills ringworm?
  • Bleach 110
  • Clean surface
  • Repeated twice
  • High heat (gt 110º F)
  • Commercial steam cleaner
  • Commercial dish washer
  • Dryer
  • Hot car
  • Dry environment and sunlight helps

35
What doesnt kill ringworm?
  • Chlorhexidine
  • Quaternary ammonium compounds
  • Potassium peroxymonosulfate (Trifectant?,
    Virkon-S?)
  • Povidone-iodine
  • Time

Whats on your exam tables?
36
Environmental cure 5 Ds
  • Diagnose
  • Recognize and treat infected and carrier animals
    and humans
  • Discard
  • Toss heavily exposed items
  • Debulk
  • Careful mechanical cleaning
  • Disinfect
  • Bleach 1.5 cups per gallon
  • Document
  • Environmental culture

37
Thank you!
And many thanks to the Shelter Medicine
Dermatology Project, a partnership between the
Dane County Humane Society and the University of
Wisconsin - School of Veterinary Medicine
Dermatology Research Laboratory
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