Research Keyword: bottlenose dolphin

Successful Treatment of Fungal Dermatitis in a Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus)

A bottlenose dolphin at a Japanese aquarium developed a serious fungal infection on its tail fin while suffering from severe digestive problems and weight loss. The infection was caused by two types of fungi that are normally hard to treat because they resist many antifungal medications. Veterinarians successfully treated the dolphin using a combination of two antifungal drugs (voriconazole and terbinafine), surgical removal of dead tissue, and daily wound cleaning with special solutions. The dolphin’s wound eventually healed completely, and this is the first documented successful treatment of these particular fungal infections in bottlenose dolphins.

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First isolation of Prototheca bovis from a bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus)

A 13-year-old bottlenose dolphin at a Japanese aquarium developed a stomach infection caused by Prototheca bovis, a type of alga rarely found in marine animals. The dolphin initially received treatment with itraconazole for a suspected fungal infection, but this was ineffective. When doctors identified the actual culprit as P. bovis through genetic testing, they switched to fos-ravuconazole, which successfully resolved the infection and returned the dolphin to good health.

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