Wednesday, August 29, 2018

3251. Sex hormone dermatosis in a female, not spayed Chihuahua











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Sex Hormone Dermatoses
World Small Animal Veterinary Association World Congress Proceedings, 2004
William H. Miller, Jr., VMD, DACVD
College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University
Ithaca, NY, USA


Domestic animals produce sex hormones in their gonads and in their adrenal glands. As far as the skin is concerned, there appears to be little need for the sex hormones. Neutered dogs and cats rarely lose hair in association with the neutering. Even if the neutered animal undergoes a bilateral adrenalectomy, postsurgical hair loss is rare. Sex hormone excesses, e.g., estrogen excess associated with a Sertoli cell tumor, or sex hormone imbalances, e.g., progesterone treatments resulting in a hypo-androgenism condition, typically will produce coat changes.
In humans, the topographic and gender variability of sex hormone receptors (number and/or hormone affinity) is well known. Studies on the same are very limited in animals but patterns of hair loss seen in the gonadal sex hormone imbalances suggest similar variability in animals. The estrogenic zones in the female include the postauricular regions, flanks, perineum, and caudal ventrum. In males, the collar region, rump, perineum, and caudal ventrum are involved. The androgenic zones in both males and females include the collar area, rump, perineum, and ventrum. Clearly, there is overlap in the distribution which may be due to receptor similarities. Another explanation for the overlap involves the counter effects of one sex hormone for another. For example, progesterone is a profound antiandrogen. Accordingly, a bitch with a hypoprogesterone problem will show androgenic coat changes.

Gonadal Disorders of the Neutered Female
Hair loss associated with neutering is very rare. If seen, the short-coated animal will develop a postauricular, ventral, and perineal hypotrichosis-to-alopecic. Long coated dogs show loss of primary but retention of secondary truncal hairs and hair loss in the flank regions. Before a neutering-associated hair loss is considered, the history and dog's coat from puppyhood must be examined. A dog with a neutering-associated hair loss will have had a breed standard puppy coat which will develop to a normal breed standard coat as the pup ages. This coat is kept for varying periods of time before the hair loss starts. Most dogs who are thought to have an "estrogen-responsive" hair loss don't have this history. Their puppy coat is normal but their adult coat is sparser then breed standard and this abnormal coat is what is lost. Some lines within certain breeds, e.g., dachshund, Boston terrier, have sparse hair coats in the estrogen zones which the owner will consider normal. It may be normal for that line of dogs but it is not breed standard and indicates that the dog (line?) has a patterned baldness (regionalized follicular hypotrichosis).

Gonadal Disorders of the Intact Female
Three different conditions are recognized. Dogs with ovarian dysregulation, ovarian cysts, or ovarian neoplasia often show cutaneous and constitutional signs of hyperestrogenism. They are in constant estrus, have numerous comedones on the vulvar and ventral skin, and have flank, perineal, and caudal ventrum hypotrichosis-to-alopecia. If the cyst or tumor produces progesterone rather then estrogen, signs of acromegaly are present.

A more common condition occurs in the older, regularly cycling bitch. Some of these dogs will develop an androgen patterned hair loss (collar region, rump, perineum, ventrum). This hair loss is associated with signs of overt pseudocyesis. When the pseudocyesis is over, the hair will regrow spontaneously but a relapse can be expected at next estrus.

The rarest condition involves the old dog who is completely anestral and has significant truncal hypotrichosis-to-alopecia. The hypogonadism in the dog is likely secondary to some other endocrine (hypothyroidism, hyperadrenocorticism) disorder and the dog should have a complete evaluation. If no other disease is found, neutering probably will result in hair regrowth.

Gonadal Disorders of the Neutered Male
Very rare. If it exists, the dog should be middle-aged to old. Aside from truncal hair loss the remaining coat should be dull, dry, and flaky and the coat color should be changing.

Gonadal Disorders of the Intact Male
Four different conditions are recognized. The first is associated with testicular neoplasia. Sertoli cell tumors and seminomas can produce estrogens while interstitial cell tumors can produce androgens. With estrogen producing tumors, hair loss occurs in the collar region, rump, perineum, and caudal ventrum and the coat often changes color. Nipple enlargement, a pendulous prepuce, and comedones usually are also seen. Some dogs develop a linear prepucial pigmentary change (erythematous or hyperpigmented) which extends from the prepucial orifice to the scrotum. With a functional interstitial cell tumor, the hair coat usually is normal (may be a little greasy). One usually sees macular melanosis of the ventral abdomen and perineum, enlargement with alopecia of the tail gland, and perianal gland tumors.

The second and most common condition occurs in dogs who appear to have normal testes (palpation, ejaculation, etc). These dogs lose primary but retain secondary hairs on the trunk, can show a coat color change, and have alopecia of the collar region, thighs, and perineum. Exposed skin tends to hyper-pigment quickly. These dogs look like those with the adrenal hyperplasia-like syndrome. Some regrow hair with castration, some respond to testosterone supplementation, some respond to castration and then testosterone when the hair loss starts to recur, and some do not respond to any sex hormone manipulation. The latter group are clearly dogs with the adrenal hyperplasia-like syndrome. Many (all?) of the remainder probably also have the disorder but the gonadal hormones probably obscure the disease. If that is true, control will be lost in the future and dog will need to be treated for adrenal hyperplasia-like syndrome.

The third and fourth conditions are very rare. Rarely one will see a dog with palpably normal testes who has a greasy coat with or without lesions of seborrheic dermatitis and is both physically and sexually aggressive. Testosterone levels are very elevated and the dog returns to normal with castration. The behavioral aspects can persist for a long time after castration and these dogs can be very dangerous to other dogs and people. In the last condition, the dog has a truncal hair loss and both testes are small and atrophic. The hypogonadism (and hair loss?) probably is due to some other endocrine disease so a full evaluation is indicated. If no disease is found, castration and testosterone supplementation is indicated.

Adult-onset Growth Hormone-Responsive Alopecia
A disorder of uncertain and questioned pathogenesis. High frequency in the Pomeranian, Chow Chow, Keeshond, and Poodle. Onset of coat problems early in adulthood (1-3 years). Males over represented. Coat changes seen include coat color change, loss of primary but retention of secondary hairs, and hair loss in the collar region, thighs and ventrum. The alopecia becomes more complete and widespread with advancing time. Exposed skin hyper-pigments quickly and markedly. Beyond the skin changes, the dogs are otherwise normal. Some dogs appear small in stature but are at the low end of the breed standard.

Affected individuals show minimal growth hormone response to the administration of xylazine and many regrow hair when growth hormone is administered. Since there are no specific growth hormone receptors in the skin, not all dogs respond to treatment, and there is a striking breed overlap with the adrenal hyperplasia-like syndrome, the growth hormone "deficiency" may just be part of the adrenal dysfunction. This is supported when the dog regrows hair with treatment of the adrenal disease.

Acromegaly
Associated with growth hormone excess due to pituitary neoplasia (rare) or excessive progestational stimulation from ovarian cysts, ovarian tumors, or progestational treatments.
Animals rarely develop hair loss. Physical abnormalities include enlargement of the facial bones (big head, widened interdental spaces), enlargement of the pedal bones (fat foot, digital intertrigo), thickening of the skin over the dorsum, and seborrhea (greasy in dogs, flaky in cats). Reason for presentation is not skin but seizure disorder or insulin-resistant diabetes mellitus.

Sex Hormone-predominating Adrenal Disease
The adrenal cortex produces both glucocorticoid and sex steroid hormones. In dogs with bilateral adrenal hyperplasia, sex hormone levels often are elevated but usually have no impact on the skin changes seen. With adrenal neoplasia or the adrenal hyperplasia-like syndrome, sex hormone predominating skin change are visible.

Adrenal Neoplasia
With a slow growing adrenal adenoma, the constitutional and cutaneous signs of Cushing's disease can mimic those seen with adrenal hyperplasia. With a rapidly growing adenoma or an adenocarcinoma, the clinical course and cutaneous signs usually are different. Constitutional signs and coat changes often are recognized simultaneously and the coat changes mimic those seen in gonadal sex hormone imbalance. Skin and coat changes seen include numerous comedones, coat color change, loss of primary but retention of secondary hairs on the trunk, and a patterned (focal and persistent) alopecia. The nature of the patterned hair loss depends on the animal's gender and the hormone in excess Females tend to develop flank and saddle hair loss while males have hair loss in the collar region, thighs, and ventrum.

Adrenal Hyperplasia-like Syndrome
The syndrome is well documented in the Pomeranian where there is an adrenal 21-hydroxylase enzymatic deficiency which results in excess or inappropriate adrenal sex hormone production. The disease is recognized in many other breeds including the Chow Chow, Samoyed, and Keeshond. There is a remarkable breed overlap with the breeds at risk for adult-onset growth hormone disease or gonadal imbalance of the intact male dog.

The adrenal irregularity in these breeds (and others) probably contributes (entirely causal?) to the clinical disease in growth hormone deficiency and some gonadal sex hormone dermatoses.
The adrenal hyperplasia-like syndrome is seen in young adult dogs of either sex. Most dogs are neutered but the hair loss will occur in intact animals and does not improve with neutering. The presentation for hair loss may not occur until the dog is middle-aged or old but coat irregularities will have been present for years if pictures of the dog are examined. At presentation, there are no constitutional signs of illness. Skin changes seen include numerous comedones, coat color change, loss of primary but retention of secondary hairs, and a patterned baldness of the collar region, thighs, perineum, and ventrum. With advancing time, the entire trunk is involved but there is significant retention of secondary hairs, giving the dog a puppy-like coat. Since glucocorticoid production is also impacted in these dogs, they eventually show clinical (polyuria, polydypsia, polyphagia) and some laboratory (slightly elevated SAP) evidence of classical adrenocorticism. Some dogs, especially Samoyeds, are very polyuric and polydipsic because they develop diabetes mellitus. Since these constitutional signs occur well after the coat changes, adrenal neoplasia can easily be dismissed.

All routine laboratory tests (hemogram, chemistry profile, urinalysis) are typically normal. Skin biopsy results will show an atrophic dermatitis with frequent catagenization of hair follicle (flame follicles) but these findings are not specific for this condition. Diagnosis is made via stimulation tests where sex hormones (± cortisol) are determined pre-and post-ACTH administration. Since gonadal sex hormones influence the interpretation of this testing and the clinical signs of gonadal sex hormone imbalance mimic those seen herein, most intact animals are neutered before the testing is performed. If there is no hair regrowth within 3 months of the surgery, adrenal testing is indicated.
Some dogs will regrow coat with the administration of melatonin (0.5 mg/kg PO q12h for a minimum of 12 weeks). Since this hormone probably only is changing hair follicle receptor sensitivity, control will be lost sometime in the future and the hair loss will return. For these dogs and those that did not respond to it, the only other effective treatment involves the use of op-DDD (15-25 mg/kg q24h to load then once to twice weekly). Because of the expense and risk of this treatment, some owners will elect no treatment. These animals, especially when progestational irregularities are present, should be monitored for signs of diabetes mellitus. If the animal's sugar levels are rising, insulin-resistant diabetes, secondary to growth hormone induction by the progestagens, is likely.

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

3250. INTERN. A 16-year-old female red-eared slider swims lop-sided to the right.

HOOK

Swim lop-sided with the right side sinking
(Video)

History. Two siblings. The male is 30% larger and more solid build. This female had laid eggs some 6 months ago. The owner saw soft shells of eggs.  The other sibling is a male.

For over 2 months, this 16-year-old red-eared slider had stopped eating compared to her sibling. She was fed pellets and vegetables for the last 15 years. The owner fed chicken meat and vegetables for the first 6 months of this year but the slider became lethargic and ate little. She was unlike her sibling that is in good health, stopped eating.

Vet 1 diagnosed soft lower shell and prescribed 3 drops of oral calcium daily. The owner said that the slider suffered from swimming lop-sided to the right. X-rays by Vet 1 showed a radio-dense area, mainly on the right side of the body on the ventral part. Vet 1 diagnosed constipation and advised the owner to feed laxatives of fruit or vegetable juice.

The slider passed black stools in small amounts when she was inappetant for over 3 months. What is the problem?

EVIDENCE

X RAYS FROM VET 1
JUL 2,  2018
showed radio-dense material on the right side of the body. The vet prescribed oral calcium syrup for the soft lower shell. Later, he prescribed laxative oil to treat the constipation as evident from the radio-dense white material seen on the right side. 








X RAYS FROM TOA PAYOH VETS
AUG 27,  2018

In-patient treatment at Toa Payoh Vets. One X-ray is taken.







Day1. Tongue swollen and inflamed

TREATMENT
Antibiotics, anti-inflammatory and syringe-feeding 3x daily
Still swimming lop-sided (video from intern).



IN-PATIENT OBSERVATION

1. August 27, 2018    Yellowish liquid discharge and viscous later from the vent passed into the water. Likely to be uterine infections. The fluid from decomposed eggs and egg shell in the right uterine area resulted in a radio-dense material seen on the right side.  As the slider is not gasping for breath and able to drink water and spew out bubbles of water, the lungs are not infected.    

History from the owner. Vent discharge.
1.  August 11, 2018    The owner reported a stinking sticky yellowish watery discharge and had seen soft shelled eggs laid around 6 months ago.

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3249. Tourists Singapore. Digital photography skills. bees, butterflies, Esplanade

1.  Canon EOS 70D, EFS 55-250 mm lens   Image Stabilizer, Macro 0.85m/2.8 ft
                                  EFS 18-135 mm lens   Image Stabilizer
2. AF, Stabilizer "On", "P" mode

3. Software: Creative CC Photoshop

4.  This is mainly what you need to create good photos for your work, lifestyle



Practise nature photography. Butterflies and bee at the Esplanade on Aug 27, 2018   9-10.30 am











Practise street photography. Tourists at the Esplanade on Aug 27, 2018   9-10.30 am




Eye contact adds interest for viewer













Practise at NATAS Travel Fair in Aug 2018
Indoor photo. Focus on the eye

Lights reflected in the eyes make photo attractive
Eye contact




3248. INTERN. Pre-operation check before surgery is very important

Although the owner may say that the female dog is healthy, this may not be correct. The vet must examine the dog systematically before every surgery.

Standard Operating Procedures
1. HISTORY. Active or not? Eating, drinking, urination and stool.
2. PHYSICAL EXAMINATION. Body Condition Score, body weight, rectal temperature, pulse rate, respiratory rate. Mucous membranes and gums pallor.
3. BLOOD TESTS, URINE TESTS, OTHER TESTS. Permission, if not granted, should be recorded in case files.  
4. IV drips



 
 Video of pre-op physical examination is shown in the video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vdeGXRfDvTo

(Delete telephone rings in video)




Sunday, August 26, 2018

3247. INTERN. A Miniature Schnauzer nearly died from tick fever


Intern to write a compelling story for the video


Aug 25, 2018
HOOK - appropriate video footage and narration

5 DAYS AGO, ON AUGUST 18, 2013, the old dog would eat only when spoon fed. 8 days ago, the dog had no appetite. This was a big worry for the owner. Not eating will lead to malnutrition and death.

The dog had a pale tongue and fever.




The vet did a blood test. It showed that the dog had  low red blood cell count, low haemoglobin and platelets. The owner wanted the dog home. She treated it with antibiotics and the dog ate when spoon-fed.

On Aug 25, 2018, the owner brought the dog in for dental scaling to improve the dog's appetite. I noticed the very pale tongue (video footage as HOOK -- White tongue on Day 1 compared to Day 3). A severe anaemia could be seen just by physical examination. This dog was not fit for anaesthesia. I asked the owner for consent for blood test and a tick-fever test as this would increase medical costs. The owner agreed.


BKTP




INTRODUCTION
Singapore is a city state with over 80% of the residents living in apartments. It is a developed country of around 6 million residents living in .......sq km. The cost of living and health care keep increasing yearly.

Apartments include condos and p
public housing HDB flats.



HDB apartments house around 80% of the residents. National Day on August 9 was celebrated recently.



Many dogs are kept at home as the owners lead hectic lives, working long hours in the offices, looking after families and young children. Many have little personal time left for the dogs as they have social activities, marketing and lead busy life-styles.






However, many younger pet owners treat their pets as family members and will research the internet for knowledge of their pet diseases like tick fever before consulting the vet. In some cases, they have done their homework and know more than the vet about a particular disease!




Some owners will bring their dogs downstairs or dog parks for exercises. These areas and some grooming shops may have infected ticks.






 A few dog will develop tick fever which is an uncommon disease in Singapore.  Presenting signs are pale tongue and gums, fever or no fever and loss of appetite.

   


EVIDENCE

1. Blood test on August 25, 2018.  The total red blood cell and haemoglobin levels had plummeted compared to 8 days ago. Platelets were very low. The owner said the dog drank but ate when spoon-fed. The dog was severely dehydrated and needed IV.  



2. Positive for Anaplasma antibody.



TREATMENT

Immediate anti-tick fever injection, iron, Vit Bs, Vit K1 in 2 bottles of IV drips. The pink colour of the tongue returned and looked almost normal on Day 3 ie. 2 days after the injection. (Image)



OUTCOME 
The dog ate the A/D canned food by herself the next 2 days after the injection and medication, indicating a happy outcome.

The owner was happy. The dog went home on August 25, 2018.
She phoned me later, "Doc, my neighbour's dog had tick fever and the vet had prescribed to her a bottle of prednisolone syrup! Do you think my dog needs it?"     
"No," I told her that each tick-fever case is different and her dog was recovering well. I reminded her that her dog needs another anti-tick fever injection one week later.

TIPS AND ADVICES FOR VETS

 1. All good vets should practise evidence-based medicine. However, some owners have a budget as laboratory tests increase medical costs.

2. Antibiotics do not cure tick fever cases. Doxycycline is used in some tick fever cases. Anti-tick fever injections are usually effective.





3. Physical examination of the dog's tongue in every case you see. It can tell you the dog had anaemia even without the blood test evidence.


3. Tick fever is a matter of life and death. As you can see in this case, the red blood cell count and haemoglobin had plunged much lower 5 days after the first consultation. The platelet count was at rock bottom. The dog was severely dehydrated when I saw him for "dental scaling". Any delay in a correct diagnosis and appropriate treatment  would be fatal.




4. When a dog has pale tongue and gums, has or does not havea fever and ticks or no tick exposure, I will give an anti-tick injection first based on a high probability of tick fever.

IMAGE OF BOTTLE OF IMIODOVER


A few dogs had been saved this way. Not every owner will consent to laboratory tests owing to financial reasons.


CONCLUSION




Sometimes, the reality of life is such that economics dictate that vets cannot practise evidence-based medicine which will add to the medical costs.









The owner is happy with a good outcome for correctly diagnosing and successfully treating tick fever as dogs are family members in Singapore.

 CREDITS

FOR MORE INFORMATION

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INTERNS NEED TO
DEFINE

Anaplasmosis
put up a written table of RBC and HB values for 3 blood test as the blood test image is too small. Also wait for the 3rd blood test by Mon or Tuesday.

Friday, August 24, 2018