Cuterebra spp. (1) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the common names?

A

Rodent Bot Fly

Rabbit Bot Fly

New World Skin Bot Flies

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2
Q

What are the hosts?

A

Rodents

Rabbits

Dogs

Cats

Squirrels

Chipmunks

Mice

Rarely Humans

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3
Q

Describe adults

A

Large - 20-30 mm

Bee-like

Stout-bodied

Short-lived

Cannot feed or bite - Mouthparts vestigial

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4
Q

Describe the third instar

A

2-4 cm long

Dark brown

Covered with spines

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5
Q

Explain the life cycle

A

Female fly lays eggs along rabbit runs/near rodent burrows

Infestation as they pass through contaminated areas

Eggs hatch in response to heat from a nearby host

1st stage larvae hatch instantaneously

Enter body via mouth or nares during grooming or open wounds

Larvae migrate to various subcutaneous locations

Develop and communicate with air through a breathing pore

One month later, larvae exit skin, fall to soil, pupate

Duration of pupation - depends on environmental factors

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6
Q

What are the sites of infestation?

A

Subcutaneous tissue

Aberrant sites

 - Mouth
 - Nose
 - Brain
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7
Q

Describe the Pathogenesis

A

Hair matted at affected area

Fibrotic cyst forms - larva in subcutaneous tissue

Migration of larvae in cat brain -> INFARCTION (tissue death due to
obstruction of blood
supply) and
FELINE ISCHEMIC
ENCEPHALOPATHY (deficiency of
blood because
of obstruction
of blood vessel
to brain)

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8
Q

What are the clinical signs?

A

Lumps in neck

Fur constantly wet

Hole drips fluid

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9
Q

How do you diagnose?

A

Seasonally - Dog/cat presents with lump in neck/legs, fur constantly
wet, hole drips clear fluid

Second instar larvae

 - 5-10 mm long
 - Gray/cream in color

Third instar larvae - most commonly seen by vets

Definitive diagnosis - Finding and identifying larva

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10
Q

How do you treat and prevent?

A

Larva removed by enlarging breathing hole and carefully removing with forceps

Care taken not to crush larva
- Squashing larvae may result in severe tissue reaction from Type I
hypersensitivity type reaction

Wound heals slowly
- Secondary bacterial growth or leakage of Cuterebra antigens

MCLs heartworm prevention, imidacloprid, fipronil protect but not approved for this claim

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11
Q

What is important about Cuterebra spp.?

A

It is ZOONOTIC

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