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An outbreak of Arthroderma vanbreuseghemii dermatophytosis at a veterinary school associated with an infected horse
Authors:Annemay Chollet  Bettina Wespi  Petra Roosje  Lucia Unger  Monica Venner  Christine Goepfert  Michel Monod
Affiliation:1. Department of Dermatology, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois, Lausanne, Switzerland;2. Vetsuisse Faculty, Department of Clinical Veterinary Medicine, Swiss Institute of Equine Medicine (ISME), University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland;3. Vetsuisse Faculty, Division of Clinical Dermatology, Department of Clinical Veterinary Medicine, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland;4. DermFocus, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland;5. Vetsuisse Faculty, Institute for Animal Pathology, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland
Abstract:
We report a case of an outbreak of inflammatory dermatophytoses caused by Arthroderma vanbreuseghemii (formally Trichophyton mentagrophytes pro parte) that involved an infected horse, the owner and at least 20 students, staff and stablemen at a veterinary school in Bern (Switzerland) that presented highly inflammatory dermatitis of the body and the face. Transmission from human to human was also recorded as one patient was the partner of an infected person. Both the phenotypic characteristics and ITS sequence of the dermatophytes isolated from the horse and patients were identical, consistent with the conclusion that the fungus originated from the horse. Three infected persons had not been in direct contact with the horse. Although direct transmission from human to human cannot be ruled out, fomites were most likely the source of infection for these three patients. Inspection of the literature at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth century revealed that this dermatophyte was frequently transmitted from horses to humans in contact with horses (stablemen, coachmen, carters and artillery soldiers). The rarity of the present case report at the present time is likely related to the transformation of civilisation from the nineteenth century to nowadays in Europe with the change of horse husbandry. In addition, the inadequate immune response of the horse and the high number of people in contact with it at the equine clinic may explain the exceptional aspect of this case report.
Keywords:Horse     Arthroderma vanbreuseghemii        Trichophyton mentagrophytes     dermatophytosis  outbreak  epidemiology
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