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Integumentary System
Cuterebra Infestation in Small Animals
Overview of Cuterebra Infestation in Small Animals
Etiology
Clinical Findings and Diagnosis
Treatment
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Chapters in Integumentary System
  • Integumentary System Introduction
  • Congenital and Inherited Anomalies of the Integumentary System
  • Atopic Dermatitis
  • Food Allergy
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  • Dermatophilosis
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  • Interdigital Furunculosis
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  • Cattle Grubs
  • Cuterebra Infestation in Small Animals
  • Fleas and Flea Allergy Dermatitis
  • Flies
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  • Mange
  • Ticks
  • Tumors of the Skin and Soft Tissues
  • Acanthosis Nigricans
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  • Miscellaneous Systemic Dermatoses
  • Nasal Dermatoses of Dogs
  • Parakeratosis
  • Photosensitization
  • Pityriasis Rosea in Pigs (Porcine juvenile pustular psoriaform dermatitis)
  • Saddle Sores
  • Seborrhea
Topics in Cuterebra Infestation in Small Animals
  • Overview of Cuterebra Infestation in Small Animals
         
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        Overview of Cuterebra Infestation in Small Animals

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        This opportunistic, parasitic infestation of dogs, cats, and ferrets is caused by the rodent or rabbit bot fly, Cuterebra spp (order Diptera, family Cuterebridae). Flies are usually host- and site-specific relative to their life cycle. However, rabbit Cuterebra are less host-specific and are usually associated with dog and cat infestations. Rarely, cats and dogs may be infested with Hypoderma spp or Dermatobia hominis. Ferrets housed outside may be infested by Hypoderma or Cuterebra spp.

        Photographs

        Cuterebra larva

        Cuterebra larva

        Etiology

        Adult Cuterebra flies are large and bee-like and do not feed or bite. Females deposit eggs around the openings of animal nests, burrows, along runways of the normal hosts, or on stones or vegetation in these areas. A female fly may deposit 5–15 eggs/site and >2,000 eggs in her lifetime. Animals become infested as they pass through contaminated areas; the eggs hatch in response to heat from a nearby host. In the target host, the larvae enter the body through the mouth or nares during grooming or, less commonly, through open wounds. After penetration, the larvae migrate to various species-specific subcutaneous locations on the body, where they develop and communicate with the air through a breathing pore. After ~30 days, the larvae exit the skin, fall to the soil, and pupate. The duration of the pupation varies depending on the environmental factors and winter diapause.

        Clinical Findings and Diagnosis

        Cuterebra lesions are most common in the summer and fall when the larvae enlarge and produce a fistulous swelling ~1 cm in diameter. Dogs, cats, and ferrets are abnormal hosts for this parasite; aberrant migrations can involve the head, brain, nasal passages, pharynx, and eyelids. In the skin, typical lesions are seen around the head, neck, and trunk. The hair is often matted, and a subcutaneous swelling is present beneath the lesions. Cats often groom the area aggressively. Pain at the site is variable and usually associated with secondary infections. Purulent material may exude from the lesion; the most common differential diagnosis is an abscess or foreign body.

        Free-roaming cats are more likely to develop lesions than indoor cats. Clinical signs are often associated with the CNS and typically occur between July and September. Cats may have depression, lethargy, or seizures; upper respiratory infections; or abnormal body temperatures (either hyperthermia or hypothermia). Common neurologic findings include blindness, abnormal mentation, and signs of unilateral prosencephalic disease. Idiopathic vestibular signs in cats may be due to aberrant migration of the parasite.

        Definitive diagnosis is made by finding and identifying a larva. In cats, CT scans may help identify larvae. Second instar larvae are 5–10 mm in length and are gray to cream in color. Third instar larvae are dark, thick, heavily spined and are the stage most commonly seen by veterinarians.

        Treatment

        Suspect lesions should be explored by carefully enlarging and probing the breathing pore or fistula with mosquito forceps. The lesion should not be squeezed because this may rupture the larva and lead to a chronic foreign body reaction and secondary infection. There are anecdotal reports of larval rupture causing anaphylaxis. If possible, the larva should be removed in one piece; recurrent abscesses at the site of previous Cuterebra infestation suggest residual infection or remaining pieces of larva. The area should be thoroughly flushed with sterile saline, debrided (if necessary), and allowed to heal by granulation. Healing may be slow. Ivermectin has been described as a treatment for cats with CNS cuterebriasis. Diphenhydramine (4 mg/kg, IM) is administered 1–2 hr prior to ivermectin (400 μg/kg, SC) and dexamethasone (0.1 mg/kg, IV). Ivermectin is not approved for use in cats.

        Last full review/revision July 2011 by Karen A. Moriello, DVM, DACVD

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