| Literature DB >> 24018026 |
Brian S Palmeiro1, Helen Roberts.
Abstract
Skin disease is an extremely common presenting complaint to the exotic animal practitioner. A systematic diagnostic approach is necessary in these cases to achieve a diagnosis and formulate an effective treatment plan. In all exotic species, husbandry plays a central role in the pathogenesis of cutaneous disease, so a thorough evaluation of the husbandry is critical for successful management. The clinical approach to skin disease in exotic animal patients is reviewed with specific focus on structure and function of the skin, diagnostic testing, and differential diagnoses for commonly encountered cutaneous diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Avian dermatology; Exotic animal dermatology; Fish dermatology; Reptile dermatology; Small mammal dermatology
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24018026 PMCID: PMC7110871 DOI: 10.1016/j.cvex.2013.05.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Clin North Am Exot Anim Pract ISSN: 1094-9194
Differential diagnoses for cutaneous diseases in reptiles
| Disease/Condition | Causes | Clinical Signs/Properties | Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bacterial | |||
| Bacterial dermatitis | Often secondary to environmental/husbandry deficiencies or trauma | Moist, exudative, and erythematous, but may also appear as blisters, crusts, and ulcerations of the integument | Clinical signs, impression cytology, and culture/sensitivity |
| Shell rot | Most common isolates include | Most common bacterial infection in chelonians, ulcers of the shell, often rimmed by areas of hyperpigmentation; loose scutes may be present and lesions can progress to osteomyelitis | Clinical signs, impression cytology, and culture/sensitivity |
| Septic cutaneous ulcerative disease | Disease syndrome in aquatic turtles maintained in poor-quality water | Craterifom ulcers on the shell and skin with septicemia and systemic signs | Clinical signs, impression cytology, and culture/sensitivity |
| Blister disease | Often associated with moist, dirty substrate or inappropriately humid environments | Lesions typically start on the ventrum as vesicles and pustules that progress to ulceration, necrosis, and abscessation; secondary septicemia is possible; most commonly seen in snakes | Clinical signs, impression cytology, and culture/sensitivity |
| Abscesses | Common isolates include | Localized soft to firm, usually nonpainful swellings that have well-defined capsules; because reptile leukocytes lack the isoenzymes to liquefy pus, a thick caseous exudate is often present | Clinical signs, fine-needle aspirate, culture/sensitivity, histopathology |
| Ectoparasites | |||
| Chiggers | Family Trombiculidae | Ingest lymph and dissolved host tissue; zoonotic, skin irritation, pruritus, irregular shedding cycles; mites are most commonly found under scales and around nostrils, eyes, and gular fold (snakes) | Direct observation, microscopic identification |
| Mites | Family Macronyssidae; including | Feed on blood; skin irritation, pruritus, irregular shedding cycles, and anemia in severe infestations mites are most commonly found under scales and around nostrils, eyes, and gular fold (snakes) | Direct observation, microscopic identification |
| Leeches | Various species | Skin irritation at site of attachment, anemia with severe infestation | Direct observation |
| Fungal | |||
| Fungal dermatitis | Often secondary to environmental/husbandry deficiencies and immunosuppression | Superficial infections present as moist, exudative erythematous ulcers or blisters, with crusts or hyperkeratotic lesions | Impression smears, fungal culture, histopathology |
| Yellow fungus disease | Seen most commonly in lizards (especially the bearded dragon, | Fungal culture, histopathology, PCR | |
| Cheilitis in spiny tail lizards ( | Cheilitis | Fungal culture, histopathology | |
| Viral | |||
| Green turtle fibropapillomas | Herpesvirus | Papillomatous growths affected soft tissues | Histopathology |
| Neoplasia | |||
| Cutaneous neoplasia | Reported types include squamous cell carcinoma, fibrosarcoma, myxomatous tumors, lipoma/liposarcoma, melanoma, chromatophoromas | Cutaneous growths | Histopathology |
| Husbandry-related/multifactorial/miscellaneous | |||
| Dysecdysis | Dysecdysis is almost always a result of deficiencies in husbandry and inappropriate environmental conditions including temperature and humidity | More commonly seen in snakes and some lizards than in chelonians; in lizards and turtles, most commonly affects the digits; in snakes, can be localized or generalized; localized dysecdysis commonly affects the spectacles and retention of this scale can result in other ocular abnormalities, such as subspectacular bullae and abscesses | |
| Secondary nutritional hyperparathyroidism (see | Multifactorial: severe imbalance of the Ca:P ration in the diet, no access to a full spectrum (ultraviolet B) light source, and a lack of activated vitamin D3; other inappropriate husbandry-related factors | Seen more commonly in lizards and chelonians abnormal bones and shells and chronic abscesses especially around jaw | History, clinical signs, radiographs, serum phosphorus, ionized calcium levels |
| Trauma | Injuries from prey-induced trauma, with rodents being responsible for most cases; trauma from other household pets is also not uncommon | Damaged skin, ulcers, erosions | History and clinical signs |
| Burns | Burns most commonly result from malfunctioning, malpositioned, or inappropriate heating elements or inactivity of the animal | More frequent in lizards and snakes; discolored, ulcerated and sloughed areas of skin | History and clinical signs, histopathology |
| Hypovitaminosis A | Dietary deficiency of vitamin A results in squamous metaplasia and epidermal hyperkeratosis | Abnormal shedding | History and clinical signs |
Hoppmann E, Barron HW. Dermatology in reptiles. J Exot Pet Med 2007;16(4):210–24.
Goodman G. Dermatology of reptiles. In: Patterson S, editor. Skin diseases of exotic pets. Ames (IA): Blackwell; 2006. p. 73–118.
Johnston MS. Scales and sheds: the ins and outs of reptile skin disease. In: Proceedings North American Veterinary Dermatology Forum. Denver (CO): 2008. p. 62–6.
Mitchell M, Colombini S. Reptiles. In: Foster A, Foil C, editors. BSAVA manual of small animal dermatology. Gloucester (England): BSAVA; 2003. p. 269–75.
Hat JM. Dermatologic problems in reptiles. In: Proceedings of the World Small Animal Veterinary Association World Congress. Geneva (Switzerland): 2010.
Mader D. Reptile dermatology. In: Proceedings of the Atlantic Coast Veterinary Conference. Atlantic City (NJ): 2011.
Fig. 1Bacterial dermatitis on the dorsolateral neck of a green iguana (Iguana iguana).
Fig. 2Shell rot in a softshell turtle (Apalone sp). Note crateriform ulcers on the carapace.
Fig. 3Ball python (Python regius) with bacterial ulcerative dermatitis (blister disease) and dysecdysis. Note ulcerative skin lesions, retained skin, and spectacles.
Fig. 4Snake mite (Ophionyssus natricis).
Fig. 5Abnormal shell in a leopard tortoise with secondary nutritional hyperparathyroidism.
Differential diagnoses for cutaneous diseases in amphibians
| Disease/Condition | Causes | Clinical Signs/Properties | Diagnosis | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parasitic | ||||
| Protozoal | Increased mucus, discoloration, cloudy skin patches, ulcers, secondary skin infection, pruritus | Skin cytology, skin scrapings, histopathology | Trichodinids are typically associated with poor water quality, low numbers may be commensal/nonpathogenic | |
| Nematodes | Weight loss, lethargy, skin roughness and ulceration particularly over the dorsum, secondary bacterial and fungal infections | Skin scrapings, histopathology | ||
| Trematodes | Cutaneous, yellow nodules | Identification of encysted parasite | Typically not pathogenic | |
| Nodular cysts on lateral line ( | Identification of encysted parasite | Typically nonpathogenic, but heavy infestation can be fatal | ||
| Limb deformities (usually hind limbs but can affect all) | Histopathology | Damage occurs because of disruption of limb formation in larval stage, usually frogs farmed or housed outdoors with exposure to snails (intermediate hosts) | ||
| Arthropods | Secondary infections, ulcers | Direct observation | Infest aquatic life stages | |
| Secondary infections, ulcers | Direct observation | Infest aquatic life stages | ||
| Leeches | Various species | Secondary infections, open wounds | Direct observation | Can transmit |
| Trombiculid mites | Various species | Red-orange vesicular lesions, cutaneous cysts | Microscopic identification | Larval stage only; adults live in the environment also known as “chiggers” |
| Ticks | Various species | Focal irritation, hemorrhage | Direct observation | |
| Fly larvae (myiasis) | Sarcophagidae, Calliphoridae, Chloropidae species larvae | Ulcers, secondary infections, erythema, deep wounds | Direct observation, histopathology | |
| Bacterial | ||||
| Red leg syndrome (bacterial dermatosepticemia) | Bacterial septicemia in amphibians often presents as reddening of skin on ventrum and hindlegs; can be secondary to environmental stressors; most commonly gram-negative pathogens ( | Erythematous hemorrhagic skin, usually ventrally and on extremities, nodules/abscesses, edema, erosions, ulcers, skin sloughing | Clinical signs, culture, histopathology | |
| Flavobacteriosis (“edema syndrome”) | Generalized edema, hydrocoelom, cutaneous hemorrhages | Bacterial culture, PCR | ||
| Mycobacteriosis | Cutaneous nodules | Stained impression smears, histopathology, culture and identification, PCR | ||
| Chlamydophilosis | Reported in | Culture, histopathology | ||
| Viral | Ranavirus (an iridovirus) | Edema, red leg syndrome, pale, raised foci, erythema and swelling near gills and hind limbs, cutaneous erosions and ulcers, secondary bacterial infection; thick mucus, cutaneous white polyps and hemorrhage (salamanders); tadpole edema virus infection in larval stages of anurans | Clinical signs, histopathology, PCR, virus isolation, transmission electron microscopy | |
| Fungal | ||||
| Chytrid | Systemic signs (lethargy, anorexia); skin sloughing; color changes; ventral edema and petechiae; mortalities related to osmoregulatory stresses | Cytologic examination of skin scrape, shed skin, PCR, histopathology | Colonizes keratinized skin only, the only keratinized area in larval stages are mouthparts so subclinical infections can occur (can break with clinical disease after metamorphosis); more than 400 amphibian species susceptible; higher incidence in winter months in wild populations | |
| Pigmented fungi | Many species including | Papular and ulcerative skin lesions, nodules, systemic signs | Histopathology, culture | |
| Water molds | Focal lesions typically, white to tan cottony growth over ulcers or erosions | Stained impression smears, wet mount impression smears or skin scrape, culture, histopathology | ||
| Noninfectious diseases | ||||
| Nutritional | ||||
| Metabolic bone disease | Subcutaneous edema, scoliosis, mandibular deformity, postural abnormalities, fractures, tetany, bloating, prolapse | History, clinical signs, radiographs | ||
| Husbandry-related | ||||
| Gas bubble disease | Water supersaturated with oxygen | Gas bubbles in skin especially toe webbing, eyes; erythema and hemorrhage of the skin, mortality | Direct observation of gas bubbles in tissues | |
| Acidic or alkaline environment | Increased or decreased pH (water, soil) | Excess mucus production, skin irritation and ulceration, erythema, respiratory and systemic symptoms | Check pH of environment | |
| Elevated water hardness | Increased water hardness | Skin lesions seen in some species of caecilians | Test water hardness | |
| Ammonia toxicity | Elevated ammonia | Increased mucus production, color changes, erythema, skin sloughing, dyspnea, neurologic signs, secondary infections | Test ammonia levels | Less toxic at lower pH, caution when changing water to prevent overall pH increases (favors more toxic unionized ammonia) |
| Lead toxicity | Lead (plumbing fixtures, décor) | Epidermal sloughing, postural abnormalities, muscular twitching, lethargy, death | Lead levels in tissues | |
| Rostral abrasions | Shipping, jumping in startled animals, iatrogenic handling, cagemate aggression, live prey items, inappropriate cage | Abrasion of the rostrum, color changes, secondary infections, atrophy of rostrum | History, observation | Usually secondary to nervous, easily startled animals. Buffer panels/coating rough surfaces inside enclosure may help reduce incidence |
| Neoplasia | Many including squamous cell carcinoma, adenomas, papillomas, chondromas | Masses (focal or diffuse), color changes, secondary infections | Histopathology | |
Differential diagnoses for cutaneous diseases in fish
| Disease/Condition | Causes | Clinical Signs/Properties | Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ectoparasties | |||
| Ciliated protozoans | |||
| “Ich,” white-spot disease | Punctate white nodules (up to 1 mm in size) on the skin/fins caused by the encysted trophont feeding stage, increased mucus, flashing, respiratory symptoms | Skin scrapings, gill biopsy | |
| Erythema, scale loss, white-to-gray irregular patches, hemorrhages, discolorations, flashing, excessive mucus production, respiratory symptoms | Skin scrapings, gill biopsy | ||
| Guppy killer disease | Erythema, scale loss, white-to-gray irregular patches, hemorrhages, discolorations, flashing, excessive mucus production, respiratory symptoms; common in guppies ( | Skin scrapings, gill biopsy | |
| Sessile ciliates | Erythema, scale loss, white-to-gray irregular patches, hemorrhages, discolorations, flashing, excessive mucus production, respiratory symptoms | Skin scrapings, gill biopsy | |
| Flagellated protozoans | |||
| Erythema, scale loss, white-to-gray irregular patches, hemorrhages, discolorations, flashing, excessive mucus production, respiratory symptoms | Skin scrapings, gill biopsy | ||
| Freshwater and marine velvet | Amber or gold dust–like sheen to the skin, excess mucus, respiratory symptoms | Skin scrapings, gill biopsy | |
| Flukes | Erythema, scale loss, white-to-gray irregular patches, hemorrhages, discolorations, flashing, excessive mucus production, respiratory symptoms | Skin scrapings, gill biopsy | |
| Capsalids | Erythema, scale loss, white-to-gray irregular patches, hemorrhages, discolorations, flashing, excessive mucus production, respiratory symptoms | Skin scrapings, gill biopsy | |
| Macroparasites (crustaceans) | |||
| Anchor worm | Parasite visible on examination; long, and narrow parasite with anchor at one end and egg sacks at opposite end; erythema and ulceration at site of attachment | Direct observation, microscopic identification | |
| Fish lice | Parasite visible on examination, erythema, excess mucus production, flashing | Direct observation, microscopic identification | |
| Bacterial | |||
| Columnaris disease | Cottony white proliferative lesions on the skin/fins; most commonly affects live bearers | Clinical signs, skin scrapings, bacterial culture | |
| Koi ulcer disease | Multifactorial, often underlying husbandry issues and environmental stressors, secondary bacterial infection | Koi ( | Clinical signs, bacterial culture |
| Mycobacteriosis | Clinical signs include ulcerative skin lesions, reduced appetite, emaciation, lethargy, exophthalmia, swollen abdomen, and fin/tail rot. Mycobacteriosis is zoonotic and can cause “fish tank granuloma” in people | Clinical signs, identification of bacteria on acid-fast stains of histopathology, culture, PCR | |
| Bacterial septicemia | Lethargy, anorexia, abnormal swimming patterns/spinning, hemorrhagic lesions on the skin, abdominal distension/ascites, abnormal position in the water column, exophthalmia, external ulcerative lesions, gill necrosis and mortality | Clinical signs, culture | |
| Viral | |||
| Lymphocystis | Iridovirus that infects dermal fibroblasts causing them to swell up to 10,000 times results in whitish nodules, typically on the fins | Wet mounts/skin scrapings with classic swollen dermal fibroblasts that appear like a cluster of grapes, histopathology | |
| Carp pox | Cyprinid herpesvirus 1 | Affects koi ( | Clinical signs, histopathology |
| Goldfish Herpesvirus | Cyprinid herpesvirus 2 | Affects goldfish ( | Clinical signs, histopathology, PCR |
| Koi herpes virus | Cyprinid herpesvirus 3 | Massive mortality (80%–100%) in koi ( | Clinical signs, histopathology, PCR, virus isolation |
| Neoplasia | |||
| Cutaneous neoplasia | Various types including fibromas; fibrosarcoma; pigment cell tumors (melanoma, erythrophoroma) and tumors of neural origin (neurofibroma, neurofibrosarcoma, schwannoma, peripheral nerve sheath tumor); squamous cell carcinoma | Nodular growths | Histopathology |
| Husbandry-related | |||
| Poor water quality | Various causes including overstocking, overfeeding, inadequate filtration or aeration, infrequent water changes | Skin changes including increased mucus production, erythema, erosions/ulceration, injected fins, flashing; behavioral changes, lethargy, anorexia, poor growth, secondary opportunistic infections, respiratory signs, gill hyperplasia, neurologic abnormalities and mortalities | Water quality evaluation (temperature, pH, ammonia, salinity, nitrite, nitrate, dissolved oxygen, and alkalinity) |
| Gas supersaturation, gas bubble disease | Supersaturation of water caused by faulty equipment, sudden elevations in temperature, Venturi effect | Gas emboli formed in circulation and tissues; gas bubbles may be seen in eyes, on fins, gills, and under skin; behavioral abnormalities, positive buoyancy (small fish), death | Clinical signs, linear gas bubbles can be seen on fin clippings and gill biopsies |
| Idiopathic | |||
| Head and lateral line erosion | Multifactorial: proposed causes include hexamitid parasites; activated carbon/carbon dust; heavy metals, such as copper; stray electrical voltage; ozone; ultraviolet radiation products; poor nutrition; nutrient deficiencies of vitamins A and C and minerals; internal disease; and various other stressors | Freshwater cichlids ( | Clinical signs, histopathology |
Roberts HR, Palmeiro BS, Weber SW. Bacterial and parasitic diseases of fish. Vet Clin North Am Exot Anim Pract 2009;12(3):609–38.
Palmeiro BS. Bacterial diseases. In: Roberts HR, editor. Fundamentals of ornamental fish health. Ames (IA): Wiley-Blackwell; 2010. p. 125–36.
Palmeiro BS, Weber SW. Viral pathogens of fish. In: Roberts HR, editor. Fundamentals of ornamental fish health. Ames (IA): Wiley-Blackwell; 2010. p. 112–24.
Wildgoose W, Palmeiro BS. Specific syndromes and diseases. In: Roberts HR, editor. Fundamentals of ornamental fish health. Ames (IA): Wiley-Blackwell; 2010. p. 214–23.
Fig. 6Gyrodactylus sp (fluke) on a skin scraping from a goldfish (Carassius auratus).
Fig. 7Ulcerative bacterial dermatitis in a koi (Cyprinus carpio). Note deep ulcerative lesion with exposed muscle and peripheral annular rim of hemorrhage. This koi also has secondary septicemia and hemorrhages on the skin and fins.
Feather types
| Feather Type | Feather Properties |
|---|---|
| Natal down | Initial feather covering usually present at time of hatching |
| Juvenile feathers | Smaller and narrower than adult feathers, replace natal down feathers |
| Feather sheath | Cover feathers as they grow from feather follicle. Typically ruptures and releases barbs |
| Contour feathers | Predominant adult feather; main type present on wings and body |
| Remiges | Flight feathers of wings; divided into primary remiges (attach to metacarpus) and secondary remiges (attach to ulna) |
| Rectrices | Flight feathers on tail |
| Coverts | Feathers that cover the bases of remiges and rectrices |
| Down | Fine feathers that lack barbules on the barbs |
| Filoplume | Close to the follicle of each contour feather, fine hairlike feathers |
| Bristle | Few or no barbs and very stiff rachis; found at base of beak and around eyes |
| Powder down | Specialized down feathers that disintegrate to produce fine granules of keratin that waterproof feathers |
| Semiplume | Large rachis with fluffy vane; present under contour feathers, important in insulation |
| After feathers (hypopenae) | Smaller feather attached to the superior umbilicus |
Differential diagnoses for cutaneous diseases in pet birds
| Disease/Condition | Causes | Clinical Signs/Properties | Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parasitic | |||
| Scaly leg/beak mite | Hyperkeratosis and crusting (often honey combed) of the cere/beak, face, legs and feet; common in Budgerigars | Skin scraping | |
| Red mite | Some cases asymptomatic, papular eruption, anemia, overpreening | Can be difficult because mite lives off host | |
| Ornithonyssus spp | Feathers matted with gray-black discoloration, skin thickened and scaly, anemia | Skin scraping | |
| Feather mites | Various species | Usually asymptomatic, large numbers may cause discoloration of the feathers and self-trauma | Direct microscopy of feather |
| Quill mites | Various species of family Syringophilidae (quill mites), Laminosioptidae and Fainocoptinae (quill wall mites) | Usually asymptomatic, large numbers may cause brittle feathers, hyperkeratosis of quill sheath, pruritus | Direct microscopy of feather or feather preparation with KOH |
| Giardiasis | Feather plucking over the torso in cockatiels ( | Fecal examination | |
| Bacterial | |||
| Bumblefoot bacterial/ulcerative pododermatitis | Various bacterial isolates including | Commonly seen in overweight cage birds including buderigars, canaries, and cockatiels; lesions including swelling, hyperkeratosis, and swelling on plantar surface of foot | History, clinical signs, impression smears, and culture/sensitivity |
| Mycobacterial granuloma | Skin lesions most commonly caused by | Most common in Amazons, blue and gold ( | Histopathology, microbiology, PCR |
| Fungal | |||
| Aspergillosis | May occur secondary to skin trauma, greenish blue or dark gray ulcerated patches on skin | Clinical signs and fungal culture | |
| Candidiasis | In canaries may cause intense head/neck pruritus, also associated with feather picking | Clinical signs, skin cytology and fungal culture | |
| Malassezia | No difference in | Skin cytology | |
| Viral | |||
| Psittacine beak and feather disease | Psittacine circovirus | Chronic form causes feather dystrophy/abnormalities (clubbing and blunting); feather loss; shiny beak; deformed beak and nails; and immunosuppression | Clinical signs, PCR of blood sample of feather pulp |
| Polyoma virus | Avian polyoma virus | In budgerigars, may cause French moult, which presents as abdominal distention, subcutaneous hemorrhages, lack of down/contour feathers and deformed feathers; other species often subclinical with rare feather abnormalities; subcutaneous and follicle hemorrhages may be seen | Cloacal swab for PCR |
| Papillomas | Considered to be viral induced; herpesvirus or papillomavirus | Papilloma-like hyperplastic/hyperkeratotic lesions most common around palpebrae, commissure of beak or feet (finches), cloaca or choana of psittacines | Clinical signs, histopathology |
| Poxvirus | Species-specific poxviruses | Dry form causes nodular lesions on nonfeathered areas around face, cere and feet; wet form affects similar areas plus mouth, pharynx, and viscera; canary pox highly infectious with 20%–100% mortality and three forms (cutaneous, diphtheritic, or septicemic) | Histopathology |
| Nutritional | |||
| Hypovitaminosis A | Most commonly seen in parrots on unsupplemented all seed diets deficient in vitamin A | Skin hyperkeratosis/scaling (worse on feet); white plaques in oral mucosa; rhinitis; blepharitis; sublingual salivary gland abscessation caused by squamous metaplasia | History of inappropriate diet and clinical signs |
| Neoplasia | |||
| Skin neoplasia | Uropygial adenocarcinoma, lipoma, fibrosarcoma, lymphosarcoma, squamous cell carcinoma, melanoma, hemangiosarcoma | Nodular lesions | Histopathology |
| Idiopathic/multifactorial/miscellaneous | |||
| Feather picking | Many behavioral and nonbehavioral causes | Self-induced feather loss, often sparing the head | Rule out nonbehavioral causes of feather plucking before diagnosing as behavioral |
| Chronic ulcerative dermatitis | Unknown; possibly associated with stressful environment | Small Psittaciformes, such as lovebirds, cockatiels, and parakeets ulcerative skin lesions over wing web or patagium and under wing | Ruling out other potential causes |
| Xanthomatosis | Unknown; possibly caused by high-fat diet, trauma, or disorder of lipid metabolism | Nodular lesions caused by accumulation of lipid-containing macrophages | Histopathology |
| Allergic skin disease | Cutaneous hypersensitivity; IgY seems to be involved in allergic reactions | Presence of true allergic dermatitis is controversial in birds; clinical signs include signs of pruritus (possibly seasonal) including feather plucking and skin mutilation | Rule out other causes of pruritic skin disease, intradermal allergy testing, skin biopsies |
| Feather follicle cysts | Probable hereditary basis, may occur secondary to traumatic damage to feather follicle and nutritional deficiencies | Common in small caged birds, such as budgerigars and canaries; cyst/swelling develops because of inability of growing feather to break through skin, may have caseous exudate or become infected | Ruling out other causes; histopathology |
| Constricted toe syndrome | Fibrous band of tissue constricts one or more digits, possibly caused by decreased humidity | Most common in African greys ( | Clinical signs |
| Articular gout | Accumulation of urates in the synovial capsules and tendon sheaths of the joints, most commonly secondary to renal pathology | Most common in psittacines; white gritty swellings around the intertarsal or metatarsal joints | Cytologic demonstration of uric acid crystals, elevated serum uric acid |
| Hypothyroidism | Rare disease of parrots, may be overdiagnosed, causes decreased molting, feather discoloration, hyperkeratosis, alopecia, obesity | Thyroid-stimulating hormone stimulation | |
Girling S. Skin diseases and treatment of caged birds. In: Patterson S, editor. Skin diseases of exotic pets. Ames (IA): Blackwell; 2006. p. 22–47.
Forbes NA. Birds. In: Foster A, Foil C, editors. BSAVA manual of small animal dermatology. Gloucester (England): BSAVA; 2003. p. 256–67.
Preziosi DE, Morris DO, Johnston MS, et al. Distribution of Malassezia organisms on the skin of unaffected psittacine birds and psittacine birds with feather-destructive behavior. J Am Vet Med Assoc 2006;2:216–21.
Nett CS, Tully T. Anatomy, clinical presentation and diagnostic approach to the feather picking pet bird. Comp Cont Educ Pract 2003;25(3):206–19.
Fig. 8Feather picking in a Hahns Macaw.
Differential diagnoses for cutaneous diseases in rabbits
| Disease/Condition | Causes | Clinical Signs/Properties | Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ectoparasites | |||
| Ear mites | Pruritic otitis, pinnal crusting, head shaking, canal erythema, thick ceruminous debris in canals, otitis externa and secondary otitis media; lesions rarely reported on face, neck, trunk extremities, and perineum; life cycle 3 wk and adults can live in environment for up to 3 wk | Otoscopic examination, microscopy of aural debris | |
| Scabies | Crusting, pruritic dermatitis, most often affecting the head | Skin scrapings, trichogram, acetate tape impression | |
| Cheyletiellosis | Scaling, walking dandruff, pruritus, alopecia, some cases asymptomatic, lacks host specificity and is zoonotic; life cycle 3 wk and can live off host for up to 10 d | Skin scrapings, trichogram, acetate tape impression | |
| Fur-clasping mite | Often asymptomatic, scaling, alopecia; coinfestation with | Skin scrapings, trichogram, acetate tape impression | |
| Demodicosis | |||
| Most often aclinical, alopecia | Skin scrapings, trichograms | ||
| Fleas | Numerous species including | Often asymptomatic, may have pruritus or poor coat; | Removal and microscopic identification |
| Lice | Anemia, pruritus | Trichograms, scrapings, microscopic identification | |
| Ticks | Numerous species including | Removal and microscopic identification | |
| Myiasis | Various fly species including | Fly strike common in outdoor environments in warm summer months, typically seen in rabbit with soiled perineum, inguinal/perineal skin most commonly affected | Removal and microscopic identification |
| Cuterebra | Subcutaneous nodular swelling with small breathing hole; neurologic and respiratory signs rare; rabbits housed outdoors most commonly affected in summer months | Surgical removal, identification | |
| Fungal | |||
| Dermatophytosis | Crusting, scaling alopecic lesions most common on the face and feet | Trichogram, fungal culture | |
| Viral | |||
| Myxomatosis | Myxoma virus (poxvirus) | Swelling of eyelids, genitals, and pinna; fever; lethargy; anorexia; nodular swellings of the face and ears; death typically within 14 d; more mild form of the disease with widespread cutaneous nodules reported in vaccinated rabbits | Histopathology, virus isolation |
| Shope papilloma virus | Shope papilloma virus (papovavirus) | Multifocal hyperkeratotic papillomas typically around ears and eyelids; can become neoplastic (squamous cell carcinoma) and metastasize to axillary lymph node or resolve over several months; insect vector | Histopathology, virus isolation |
| Shope fibroma virus | Shope fibroma virus (poxvirus) | Fibroma lesion; single or multiple flat subcutaneous nodules especially on genitals, perineum, ventral abdomen, legs, nose, pinna, eyelid; up to 7 cm in diameter, tumors typically regress over a period of months | Histopathology, virus isolation |
| Bacterial | |||
| Rabbit syphilis, venereal spirochaetosis | Venereal transmission and by direct contact | Dark field microscopic visualization of organism or silver stains on histopathology, serology | |
| Subcutaneous abscesses | Dental disease, bite wounds, other injuries; isolates include various anaerobic bacteria, | Rabbit heterophils cannot liquefy pus so abscesses are caseous with thick capsule; facial abscesses most commonly caused by dental disease | Clinical signs, fine-needle aspirate/cytology, culture/sensitivity, imaging for dental-associated abscesses |
| Moist dermatitis “blue fur disease” | Severe chronic dental disease and excess salivation (slobbers), Overweight animals with large dewlap; constant wetting prediposes to colonization with | Moist erythematous dermatitis of chin, neck, and dewlap, blue-green discoloration to fur (from pyocyanin pigment produced by | Clinical signs, impression cytology, culture/sensitivity |
| Neoplasia | |||
| Neoplasia | Reported types (in decreasing frequency) trichoblastoma, collagenous hamartoma, shope fibroma, lipoma, squamous cell carcinoma, myxosarcoma, peripheral nerve sheath tumor, malignant melanoma, fibrosarcoma, carcinoma, squamous papilloma, liposarcoma, leiomyosarcoma, trichoepithelioma, apocrine carcinoma, shope papilloma | Cutaneous growths | Histopathology |
| Husbandry-related/multifactorial/miscellaneous | |||
| Urine scalding | Urinary tract disease (hypercalciuria, urinary calculi, urinary tract infection), wet bedding, obesity, inactivity, neuromuscular disease, and so forth | Moist erythematous dermatitis perineal region, plantar hind limbs | Clinical signs |
| Frostbite | Cold environmental temperatures | Necrosis of pinnal margins | Clinical signs; histopathology |
| Ulcerative pododermatitis | Loss of thick fur on plantar/palmar limbs leads to pressure induced necrosis of skin | Alopecia, erythematous, painful ulcerative dermatitis of the metatarsal (less commonly metacarpal) regions; can progress to osteomyelitis | Clinical signs, impression cytology, culture/sensitivity |
| Barbering | Dominant animals in collection; occasionally self-barbering during estrus or with low-fiber diet | Broken hairs, alopecia | History, clinical signs, trichograms showing broken hairs |
| Sebaceous adenitis | Unknown; immune-mediated attack on sebaceous glands | Nonpruritic scaling and alopecia, follicular casting | Histopathology |
| Telogen defluxion | Systemic stress/illness or after parturition | Widespread hairloss 4–6 wk after systemic stress, nonpruritic, hair easily epilated, patchy alopecia | History, clinical signs, histopathology |
| Cutaneous asthenia | Heritable collagen defect | Hyperextensible skin, thin atrophic scars, wounds | Electron microscopy, histopathology may be supportive |
| Thymoma-associated exfoliative dermatitis | Thymoma | Generalized scaling, alopecia | Histopathology, thoracic radiographs |
Meredith A. Dermatology of mammals. In: Patterson S, editor. Skin diseases of exotic pets. Ames (IA): Blackwell; 2006. p. 175–312.
Scarff D. Rabbits and rodents. In: Foster A, Foil C, editors. BSAVA manual of small animal dermatology. Gloucester (England): BSAVA; 2003. p. 242–51.
Jenkins JR. Skin disorders of the rabbit. Vet Clin North Am Exotic Anim Pract 2001;4:543–63.
Johnston MS. Small, cute, fluffy and itchy: clinical approach to rabbit and rodent skin diseases. In: Proceedings North American Veterinary Dermatology Forum. Denver (CO): 2008. p. 74–8.
von Bomhard W, Goldschmidt MH, Shofer FS, et al. Cutaneous neoplasms in pet rabbits: a retrospective study. Vet Pathol 2007; 44(5):579–88.
White SD, Linder KE, Schultheiss P, et al. Sebaceous adenitis in four domestic rabbits (Oryctalagus cuniculus). Vet Dermatol 2000;11:53–60.
Florizoone K. Thymoma-associated exfoliative dermatitis in a rabbit. Vet Dermatol 2005;16(4):281–4.
Fig. 9(A, B) Note moderate scaling and self-induced alopecia. (C) Cheyletiella parasitivorax.
Differential diagnoses for cutaneous diseases in guinea pigs
| Disease/Condition | Causes | Clinical Signs/Properties | Diagnosis | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infectious | ||||
| Bacterial | ||||
| Cervical lymphadenitis | Bacterial infection of cervical lymph nodes, coarse feed causes oral trauma | Fluctuant to firm swelling in cervical lymph nodes | History of consumption of coarse feed causing oral trauma, typical clinical signs, culture | Node may rupture, |
| Staphylococcal pyoderma | Alopecia, erythema, crusts, abscessation, ulcers, folliculitis | Clinical signs, cytology, culture/sensitivity | ||
| Otitis media/interna | Multiple bacterial etiologies | Head tilt, head shaking, circling, purulent discharge, ataxia | Clinical signs, diagnostic imaging of bulla, culture exudate | |
| Abscesses | Bite wounds, environmental trauma | Fluctuant to firm subcutaneous swelling, drainage | Clinical signs, culture | |
| Ectoparasites | ||||
| Lice (see | Pruritus, alopecia, crusts/scales, erythema, excoriations, secondary pyoderma, Pruritus can be intense, resembling seizures | Skin scraping, acetate tape impression, trichogram | Zoonotic but self limiting | |
| Often subclinical, rough coat, scale, alopecia, pruritus in heavy infestations | Skin scraping, acetate tape impression, trichogram, direct visualization | Biting lice; environmental cleaning essential part of treatment | ||
| Subclinical, pruritus, self-induced alopecia | Skin scraping, acetate tape impression, trichogram | |||
| Alopecia, erythema, crusts, affected animals immunosuppressed | Skin scraping | |||
| Fungal | ||||
| Dermatophytosis | Scaling alopecia on face, legs, ears; occasional pruritus; crusts; papules; pustules; secondary bacterial pyoderma | Trichogram, fungal culture, biopsy | ||
| Noninfectious/husbandry-related/miscellaneous | ||||
| Hypovitaminosis C | Vitamin C deficiency | Poor wound healing, depression, rough hair coat, pinnal scaling, swollen joints, abnormal gait, petechiae of mucous membranes, lameness, secondary infections | Guinea pigs cannot synthesize vitamin C, condition can be seen in cavies fed rabbit pellets or other ascorbic acid–deficient diet | |
| Cystic ovarian disease (see | Cause unknown; estrogenic substances in hay have been implicated | Bilateral, symmetric alopecia (back, flanks, ventrum), nonpruritic | Clinical signs in a female cavy, palpation, diagnostic imaging | |
| Pregnancy-associated alopecia | Sow with nonpruritic bilateral flank alopecia during late pregnancy | History, ruling out other causes | ||
| Pododermatitis | Poor cage hygiene, wire cage flooring, obesity, sedentary cavy, hypovitaminosis C; | Mild swelling of plantar surface of foot progressing to ulcerations and osteomyelitis | Clinical signs, culture lesions, history | Multimodal approach to treatment is required |
| Cheilitis | Oral trauma; feeding acidic and abrasive food stuffs, hypovitaminosis C; | Perioral ulceration erythema and crusting | History, clinical signs, impression cytology culture | |
| Scent gland impaction | Scent glands on rump become impacted | Malodorous dermatitis, matted hairs, secondary infection | History, clinical signs | |
| Barbering | Barbering in group of animals or self-barbering | Incomplete/traumatic alopecia, chewed whiskers | History, trichogram showing broken hair shafts | |
| Neoplasia | Trichofolliculoma most common cutaneous neoplasm, others include sebaceous adenoma, lipoma, fibromas, fibrosarcomas, schwannoma, vascular anomaly | Nodules, masses and lumps; trichofolliculomas often have central pore through which keratinaceous debris is discharged | Biopsy, fine-needle aspirate/cytology | |
Fig. 10Gyropus ovalis from a guinea pig.
Fig. 11Cystic ovarian disease resulting in symmetric noninflammatory flank alopecia.
Differential diagnoses for cutaneous diseases in gerbils and hamsters
| Disease/Condition | Causes | Clinical Signs/Properties | Diagnosis | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infectious causes | ||||
| Bacterial | ||||
| Bacterial pyoderma | Secondary to trauma, ectoparasites, or accumulated hardenian gland secretions in nasal dermatitis (gerbils) or dental disease (hamsters) | Erythema, crusting, alopecia | Impression smears, cytology, culture | |
| Viral | ||||
| Hamster polyomavirus (papovavirus) | HaPV | Associated with cutaneous epithelioma/trichoepithelioma; verrucous mass near eyes, mouth, and perianal region in young hamsters; transmitted by urine | Histopathology | |
| Parasitic | Pruritus, scales, crusts, secondary infections | Skin scraping, impression smear, biopsy | ||
| Alopecia, scaling, erythema | Skin scraping | Cigar-shaped, inhabits hair follicles; evaluate for underlying immunosuppressive disease | ||
| Alopecia, scaling, erythema | Skin scraping | Short- and fat-bodied, superficial, inhabits keratin; evaluation for underlying immunosuppressive disease | ||
| Yellow crusts, pinnae, tail, paws, muzzle | Skin scraping | |||
| Alopecia, scaling, ulceration, secondary bacterial infection; most commonly affects face, thorax, abdomen, and limbs | Trichogram, skin scrapings | |||
| Alopecia, scaling, thickening of skin over tail, head, hind end | Trichogram, skin scrapings | |||
| Pruritus, alopecia | Skin scraping | Transmissible to other animals including humans | ||
| Fungal | ||||
| Dermatophytosis | Pruritus, alopecia, crusts, scales, erythema, dry skin, secondary bacterial infections | Fungal culture, trichogram | Asymptomatic carriers possible, environmental cleaning essential, can be zoonotic and also spread to other susceptible species | |
| Noninfectious | ||||
| Hyperadrenocorticism (hamster) | Primary-neoplasia of adrenal gland, secondary-pituitary tumor, iatrogenic | Symmetric alopecia, hyperpigmentation, thin skin, comedones, polyuria/polydipsia, polyphagia, pot-bellied, secondary demodicosis | Clinical signs, adrenal ultrasound | Can resemble demodicosis and cutaneous lymphoma Hyperadrenocorticism with secondary demodicosis is common |
| Hair coat roughness (hamster, gerbils) | Aging, fighting, high humidity (gerbils, >50%), overall bad health, stress | Rough appearing, greasy coat | History, clinical signs, ruling out other causes | |
| Facial dermatitis, nasal dermatitis, “sore nose” (gerbils) | Gerbils stressed by overcrowding and high humidity, hypersecretion of gland results in accumulation of porphyrin pigment around nares; may lead to self-trauma and secondary staphylococcus infection | Alopecia, erythema and crusting around the nares, can progress to face, paws, and ventral abdomen, alopecia, secondary moist dermatitis | Clinical signs, impression smears, bacterial culture porphyrins fluoresce under ultraviolet light | |
| Bald nose | Rubbing on wire cage or feeders or burrowing | Traumatic alopecia on dorsum of nose and muzzle | Clinical signs, history, trichogram | |
| Barbering | Dominant individual chews hair off of other animals | Traumatic alopecia on dorsal head and tail base | Clinical signs, history, trichogram | |
| Tail slip (gerbils) | Improper handling of tail | Skin lost from tail exposing muscle and bone | History and clinical signs | |
| Neoplasia | ||||
| Hamsters | Epitheliotrophic lymphoma | Alopecia, erythema, scaling, pruritus, secondary infections, ulceration, crusts, plaques, or nodules | Histopathology | Rule outs include demodicosis or hyperadrenocorticism; demodicosis can be secondary to epithelioptrophic lymphoma |
| Melanoma, melanocytoma, epithelioma, trichoepithelioma, squamous cell carcinoma, fibrosaroma, basal cell carcinoma, papilloma | Fine-needle aspirate, histopathology | |||
| Gerbils | Melanoma, melanocytoma, neoplasia of ventral scent gland (scent gland carcinoma), squamous cell carcinoma, basal cell carcinoma | Fine-needle aspirate, histopathology | ||
Fig. 12(A) Demodicosis resulting in alopecia and mild crusting in a long-haired golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus). (B) Demodex aurati: note long cigar shape. (C) Demodex criceti: note short stubby appearance.
Differential diagnoses for cutaneous diseases in mice and rats
| Disease/Condition | Causes | Clinical Signs/Properties | Diagnosis | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infectious causes | ||||
| Bacterial | ||||
| Pyoderma | Pruritus, hairloss, abscessation | Impression smears, culture | ||
| Viral | ||||
| Sialodacryoadenitis (rats; rat coronavirus) | Sneezing, oculonasal discharge, swelling near eyes, cervical edema, cervical lymphadenopathy, corneal ulceration/hyphema, secondary infections | Clinical signs, serology, histopathology | ||
| Ectoparasites | ||||
| Fur mite (mice, rats) | Alopecia, pruritus, ulceration, scaling, secondary bacterial dermatitis; asymptomatic | Skin scraping, acetate tape impression, trichograms | ||
| Fur mite (mice, rats) (see | Alopecia, pruritus, ulceration, scaling, secondary bacterial dermatitis; asymptomatic | Skin scraping, acetate tape impression, trichograms | ||
| Small white nodules, especially on the pinnae | Skin scraping, acetate tape impression, trichograms | Burrowing mite, found in stratum corneum | ||
| Rare, follicular mite, localized alopecia, secondary infection | ||||
| Rat mange mite | Most common on pinnae and nose, hyperkeratotic, papules, yellow crusts | Skin scraping, acetate tape impression | ||
| Alopecia, pruritus, ulceration, scaling, secondary bacterial dermatitis; asymptomatic | Skin scraping, acetate tape impression, trichograms | |||
| Lice (see | Pruritus, hairloss, restlessness, anemia | Possible vector of tularemia | ||
| Pinworms | Perianal pruritus | Acetate tape impression from perineal region | ||
| Fungal | ||||
| Dermatophytosis | Alopecia, crusts, scales, erythema, dry skin, secondary bacterial infections; asymptomatic carriers common | Fungal culture, trichogram | Environmental cleaning essential, can be zoonotic and also spread to other susceptible species | |
| Noninfectious | ||||
| Neoplasia | Mammary gland fibroadenoma (rats); adenocarcinoma; fibrosarcoma (mice); squamous cell carcinoma (mice, rats); fibroma; papillomas; basal cell carcinomas | Clinical signs and typical location, fine-needle aspirate/cytology, biopsy | Histopathology | |
| Mammary masses in rats can get very large | ||||
| Husbandry-related | ||||
| Barbering (mice) | Hair and whiskers of subordinates are chewed by dominant mouse | Incomplete/traumatic alopecia, chewed whiskers, dominant mouse has intact whiskers | History, clinical signs | Typical in group housing, especially males Reducing numbers may help |
| Ring tail (mice, rats) | Low environmental humidity | Annular constriction at base of tail, secondary edema and necrosis develop | History, clinical signs | Usually young mice/rats, not common in pet rats |
Fig. 13Myobia musculi from a mouse.
Fig. 14Polyplax spinulosa from a rat.
Differential diagnoses for cutaneous diseases in ferrets
| Disease/Condition | Causes | Clinical Signs/Properties | Diagnosis | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infectious | ||||
| Viral | Canine distemper virus (paramyxovirus) | Brown crusted lesions on chin, nose, inguinal, and perianal region Hyperkeratosis and swelling of footpads; pyrexia, nasal, and ocular discharge, coughing, anorexia, neurologic signs and death | Clinical signs, fluorescent antibody of conjunctival smears, peripheral blood smear, serum antibody titers, histopathology | Vaccine available |
| Bacterial | ||||
| Bacterial pyoderma | Secondary to trauma, bite wounds, rough playing, ectoparasites; most commonly caused by | Superficial to deep pyoderma, abscesses, cellulitis | Cytology, culture | |
| Fungal | ||||
| Dermatophytosis | Circular alopecia, erythema, scaling, secondary pyoderma | Trichogram, fungal culture | ||
| Parasitic | ||||
| Ectoparasites | Fleas ( | Pruritus, scaling, crusting, alopecia, excoriations | Observation, clinical signs, flea “dirt” or live fleas on flea combing | |
| Ear mites ( | Otic pruritus, excess dark brown ceruminous debris, head shaking, ectopic sites include feet and tail tip | Otoscopic examination, microscopy of aural debris | ||
| Sarcoptic mange mite (S | General form: focal to diffuse alopecia, pruritus, scaling; Localized form: only toes/feet affected inflammation, swelling, crusts, and pruritus of paws; nails may become deformed and slough | Skin scraping, mites may be difficult to find | ||
| Noninfectious | ||||
| Endocrine | ||||
| Hyperadrenocorticism (see | Adrenocortical hyperplasia, adenoma or adenocarcinoma; neutering may play role in pathogenesis | Bilateral, symmetric alopecia, pruritus, vulvar enlargement, comedones, prostatic hyperplasia, stranguria, and urinary obstruction in males | Clinical signs, abdominal palpation, elevations of one or more levels of circulating sex hormones, ultrasonography, pancytopenia may be present | |
| Hyperestrogenism | Unmated females not stimulated to ovulate may result in prolonged estrus | Swollen vulva, alopecia, bone marrow suppression, anemia | Clinical signs, history, CBC | |
| Hypersensitivity | Atopic dermatitis, food allergy | Pruritus | Rule out more common causes of pruritus, intradermal allergy testing, food trial | |
| Neoplasia | ||||
| Mast cell tumors | Small, round, slightly raised, dermal mass, Occasional yellow crusty surface or pruritic | Fine-needle aspirate, histopathology | Usually benign Can occur anywhere but common head, neck, shoulders, or trunk | |
| Apocrine scent tumors | Adenocarcinoma, adenoma | Located in areas of high concentration of scent glands; head, neck, prepuce, vulva, perineum | Fine-needle aspirate, histopathology | Can exhibit rapid growth and be locally aggressive and metastatic |
| Basal cell tumor | Discrete, solitary, often pedunculated or ulcerated | Fine-needle aspirate, histopathology | ||
| Cutaneous lymphoma | Nodules, ulcerated masses, swelling, pruritus, alopecia, erythema, scaling; most commonly affects feet and extremities | Cytology, histopathology | ||
| Sebaceous adenomas/epitheliomas | Mass may be ulcerated, have necrotic centers | Fine-needle aspirate, histopathology | ||
| Environmental | ||||
| Seasonal alopecia | Seasonal molting | Bilaterally symmetric alopecia of tail, inguinal region, and perineum during breeding season | Clinical signs, history, season, ruling out other etiologies | |
| Telogen defluxion | 2–3 mo after stressful event | Thinning of coat | History, ruling out other causes | |
| Nutritional | ||||
| Biotin deficiency | Raw eggs in diet | Bilaterally, symmetric alopecia | Dietary history, clinical signs | Compound in egg whites, avidin, binds dietary biotin |
Fig. 15Alopecia in a ferret with hyperadrenocorticism.
Differential diagnoses for cutaneous diseases in chinchillas
| Disease/Condition | Causes | Clinical Signs/Properties | Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bacterial | |||
| Abscesses | Bite wounds, dental disease; | Soft fluctuant swelling | Fine-needle aspirate, culture/sensitivity, imaging |
| Moist dermatitis | Staphylococcal infection caused by excessive salivation from dental disease | Moist erythematous dermatitis, ventral chin and neck | Clinical signs, culture/sensitivity |
| Fungal | |||
| Dermatophytosis | Alopecia; scaling; crusting and erythema around eyes, nose, mouth, legs, and feet | Trichogram, fungal culture | |
| Husbandry-related | |||
| Dietary deficiencies of fatty acids, zinc, and panthothenic acid | Unbalanced diet | Patchy alopecia, scaly skin | History, clinical signs, and response to supplementation |
| Yellow ears, yellow fat | Diet deficient in choline, methionine, or vitamin E; impaired metabolism of plant pigments leads to concentration of yellow-orange pigment in skin and fat | Yellowish discoloration of skin worse on the ventral abdomen and perineal, painful swellings on ventral abdomen | Clinical signs and history |
| Cotton fur syndrome | High protein diet (crude protein >28%) | Wavy, weak hair that appears like cotton | Dietary analysis for protein levels and clinical signs |
| Fur chewing | Barbering, may be related to overcrowding or other stressor | Traumatic alopecia | Trichogram |
| Matted fur | Lack of dust baths, high relative humidity | Matted fur | Clinical signs and history |
| Miscellaneous | |||
| Fur-slip | Rough handling, frightened, trauma, fighting causes rapid shedding of patch of fur; natural defense mechanism | Well-circumscribed alopecia | History, clinical signs, and ruling out other differentials, especially dermatophytosis |
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