Rhinosinusitis in an Australian mare caused by Flavodon flavus, a recently recognized invasive fungal pathogen of the horse

Author:

Suen Willy W.123,Zedler Steven123,Price Rochelle123,Maguire Tina123,Halliday Catriona123,Rosenblatt Alana J.123,Allavena Rachel E.123,Owen Helen123,Medina-Torres Carlos E.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Veterinary Science, Faculty of Science, The University of Queensland, Gatton, Queensland, Australia (Suen, Zedler, Price, Maguire, Rosenblatt, Allavena, Owen, Medina-Torres)

2. CSIRO Australian Animal Health Laboratory, Geelong, Victoria, Australia (Suen)

3. Centre for Infectious Diseases and Microbiology Laboratory Services, ICPMR, New South Wales Health Pathology, Westmead Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (Halliday)

Abstract

We describe herein the clinical, endoscopic, computed tomography (CT), pathologic, and microbiologic features of an infection caused by an under-recognized fungal pathogen, Flavodon flavus, in a 25-y-old Australian Quarter Horse. The horse had a unilateral obstructive nasal mass, resulting in stertor and dyspnea. On endoscopy, the mass was tan, multinodular, and completely obstructed the nasal passage. CT analysis revealed a large, soft tissue–attenuating and partially mineralized mass in the right nasal passage and dorsal-conchofrontal sinus, expanding into adjacent paranasal sinuses with associated bone lysis and rhinosinusitis. Histopathology of the mass on 2 occasions revealed suppurative inflammation initially, and pyogranulomatous inflammation subsequently. The inflammatory reaction surrounded numerous spherical fungal structures (~60–80 µm diameter) that stained positively on periodic acid–Schiff and Grocott methenamine silver stains. PCR for the fungal internal transcribed spacer 1 and 2 regions followed by Sanger sequencing on a cultured isolate identified the agent as F. flavus, which has only been reported previously as pathogenic in one horse in the United States, to our knowledge. Previous reports described this fungus as a nonpathogenic, environmental commensal fungus associated with insects and plants.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Veterinary

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