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Laboratory Procedures for Skin Diseases |  |
| Skin Scrapings: |
| Skin scrapings are part of the basic database for all skin diseases. There are 2 types of skin scrapings, superficial and deep. Superficial scrapings do not cause capillary bleeding and provide information from the surface of the epidermis. Deep skin scrapings collect material from within the hair follicle; capillary bleeding indicates that the sampling was deep enough. Skin scrapings are used primarily to determine the presence or absence of mites. Skin scrapings are best
performed using a skin-scraping spatula, which is a thin metal weighing spatula commonly found in pharmacy or chemical supply catalogs. These spatulas are reusable and will not injure patients. |
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| Combing of the Hair Coat: |
| This technique, commonly referred to as “flea combing,” is useful for collecting large amounts of skin debris and for trapping cutaneous parasites. Combings are particularly useful for finding fleas, ticks, lice, and some mites. A clean scrub brush or curry comb can be used to collect material into a flat container (eg, pie plate) in large animals. |
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| Examination of Hairs: |
| Microscopic examination of hair shafts can be used to look for evidence of self-trauma, dermatophyte infections (requires clearing agents and special staining), dysplastic hairs, and sometimes genetic diseases of the hair coat. |
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| Cytology: |
| Cutaneous and auricular cytology is helpful in identifying bacterial, fungal, and possibly neoplastic skin diseases. At least 4-6 impression smears should be made; several slides should be saved for examination by a reference laboratory if necessary. When performing impression smears of the skin, the glass slide should be placed directly over the site to be sampled. An index finger or thumb should be placed directly over the slide and very firm pressure exerted. Adequate
sampling will produce a “thumb print” from the surface. At least one slide should be heat fixed with a match or lighter prior to staining. In most cases, Diff-Quick stain is adequate. In pruritic patients, material should be scraped from beneath nail beds and smeared onto glass slides for heat fixing, staining, and cytologic examination. Specimens should be examined under 4×, 10×, and oil immersion magnification. |
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| Fungal Cultures: |
| Dermatophyte infections are best identified with a fungal culture on either dermatophyte test medium or on plain Sabouraud’s agar. Plates that are easily inoculated are preferred; glass screw-topped jars are difficult to inoculate and obtain samples from and are best avoided. Cats are best sampled using a new toothbrush aggressively combed over the affected lesions. Dogs can be sampled with either a toothbrush or via a hair plucking technique. In large animals, hairs should be
gently wiped with alcohol before collecting to minimize contaminant growth. Intermediate and deep fungal organisms are best cultured by a reference laboratory using a skin biopsy specimen (6-8 mm in size). |
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| Bacterial Cultures: |
| Intact pustules can be cultured by rupturing the pustule with a sterile needle and swabbing the lesion with a sterile culture swab. Lesions should not be scrubbed before sampling. Deep pyodermas are best cultured from a skin biopsy (6-8 mm). The reference laboratory should be informed as to what pathogens are suspected as this may affect how the exudate is cultured. Systemic and topical agents should be withheld for at least 72 hr prior to sampling. |
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| Biopsy: |
| Skin biopsies are indicated in any case that appears severe, unusual, or does not respond to appropriate therapy. Lesions should not be scrubbed before biopsy because surface pathology is important in the diagnosis of many skin diseases. Several samples from a variety of lesions should be submitted for examination. It is important to try to sample primary lesions; otherwise, the report is often not very helpful in making a diagnosis or narrowing a list of differential
diagnoses. Biopsy specimens require examination by a pathologist familiar with skin diseases of animals. Direct immunofluorescence is not necessary to diagnose autoimmune skin diseases; routine histopathology is the test of choice. |
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| Routine Blood and Urine Tests: |
| In most dermatologic cases, these tests do not help to make a definitive diagnosis. If systemic signs of an illness are present, then a CBC, serum chemistry panel, and urinalysis may be helpful in identifying the etiology. In dogs with recurrent infections, these tests may identify an underlying subclinical disease. |
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| Intradermal Skin Testing: |
| This test is not necessarily required to make a diagnosis of atopy. A positive intradermal skin test reaction indicates past exposure to a particular allergen. Inhalant allergies are best diagnosed based on a compatible history, physical examination findings, and judicious use of intradermal skin testing or in vitro testing for allergies. Intradermal skin testing is recommended for animals in which immunotherapy is indicated due to the severity or duration of allergic signs.
The potential drug interactions that can interfere with testing should be considered before intradermal skin testing is performed. |
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| In Vitro Diagnostic Tests: |
| In vitro diagnostic tests (ELISA or RAST tests) are an alternative to intradermal skin testing. Although in vitro tests are considered less reliable because of the large number of false positive reactions, most complications in interpretation are the result of poor patient selection. |
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