Re: Calcinosis Cutis and Trilostane
Hey Marianne: CoCo has CC on his tail and developed it after the Trilostane, about 6 calcium bumps and the end of his tail is without hair. His hair is so thin all over and has never regrown where shaved which was early in his testing. Really makes you wonder. I am really concerned since I took CoCo to the speciality hospital. I kind of dismissed the vet until I read her report yesterday. She said that possibly CoCo had atypical rather than typical and I tuned her out after that since she said take him off Trilostane for 30 days and check for atypical. Now I am rethinking what she said. Can someone stop my thinking processes, I am obsesssed with Cushings in my dog. I have too much thinking to do with my human medical problems to start over again with my little dog.
Anything for the furbabies. Thanks Marianne. Love, JoAnne
Re: Calcinosis Cutis and Trilostane
Hi JoAnne,
Thanks for telling us about CoCo's history with the CC. We staffers are going to start putting together a summary of our members' experiences, and now we'll be able to add CoCo's info as well. Have his bumps stayed about the same, or have they been changing over time?
As far as his diagnosis, I agree with the other folks who have written on your thread that CoCo was originally accurately diagnosed with traditional Cushing's due to his highly elevated cortisol. It is probably true that he also has elevations in at least some of his other adrenal hormones, because that seems to go hand-in-hand with elevated cortisol (in the absence of high cortisol, those elevations would be referred to as "Atypical"). Whether or not those other elevations are also figuring into his problems, we do not know. Apparently the IMS with whom you consulted worries that may be the case, but there is a difference of opinion about that even among the experts.
I'm afraid what we "do" know is how much we really "don't" yet know about all these complicated endocrinological interconnections! Since the majority of Cushpups do not develop Calcinosis Cutis regardless of which medication is used to treat their Cushing's, it seems to me that there have to be multiple (as yet, unknown) factors at play in order for the CC to manifest. As I read in one article about the disorder:
Quote:
Calcinosis Cutis develops in some animals but not in others, even though they have similar steroid hormone or blood calcium concentrations.
I am so sorry that poor little CoCo continues to have such problems. You are a wonderful mom, and I know how hard things have to be feeling to you right now. :o
Marianne
Re: Calcinosis Cutis and Trilostane
And Shelly, thanks for sharing Lucy's history, as well!
Marianne
Re: Calcinosis Cutis and Trilostane
Marianne: CoCo's calcium bumps have been on his tail about 9 months, have not changed much, end of tail has hair loss, some worse in the past few months. He has been on Vetoryl since 7/12. I did not start him on medication for about 14 months after first noticing the water drinking and hungry, treated him with Melatonin and HMR Lignans. Ultrasound was done in 5/12 and it was decided he had pituitary Cushings, and started on 10 mg Vetoryl in 7/12, then cortisol went up and started on 20 mg in 12/12 and that is where we are now. Post cortisol was 6 in 6/13. His tail does have about 5 or 6 calcium bumps on it that are above the hair, but his tail does look bumpy so I suspect there are some under the tail hair, so could possibly be caused by the Vetoryl or cortisol, who knows. Hates to have his tail examined. His hair really looks bad all over, really thin and no regrowth. This is a good place to find out the symptoms since all have cushings and on same medications. I have thought that the Vetoryl has caused the hair loss and weight loss. Love, JoAnne
Re: Calcinosis Cutis and Trilostane
While naturally occurring cushing's and prednisone administration are the most common causes, there are other causes as well. Leptospirosis, hyperparathyroidism and administration of calcium for hypoparathyroidism and renal disease. The connection is any condition that raises calcium and I believe phosphate levels. I don't think anybody has figured out why some dogs never develop CC while a small number of dogs do.
Re: Calcinosis Cutis and Trilostane
Zoe started this disease with hair/coat skin issues. It was her main complaint. She developed mineral bumps on her tail with hair loss prior to treatment. She was put on melatonin and lignans which controlled estradiol,her cortisol continued to rise. Her hair and skin issues continued to worsen and she developed very dry skin and dandruff. We started treating her with Vetoryl but because of her IBD I allowed her cortisol to remain on the high side. Her skin worsened, and she developed white pimple bumps that a derm vet identified as Calcinosis Cutis.
As soon as I dropped her cortisol down under five, the first symptom to improve were those same white hard bumps. They became smaller, pin head size. When her cortisol rose, they became larger.
After her vulva surgery we lost control of her cortisol and Zoe developed many secondary skin issues and her CC worsened but never to the extent of some of the other dogs here. Her skin got worse before it got better.
We have now successfully treated her secondary skin issues, her cortisol was post 4ug/dl and her white hard pimple bumps are very tiny and most of them are gone, she is regrowing hair for the first time in three years and her caramel colored spots are returning.
The two hard bumps on her tail remain. Her tail is the one spot I cannot get rid of her secondary skin issues as I cant suds it up with the Ketochlor as well as other parts of her body.
Zoe has been on name brand Vetoryl, no compounded drug, for two years. Her blood work in 2010 showed phosphorus at 3.4 (normal range 2.5-7.9) and calcium 9.7 (normal range 8.7-12)
After two years on Vetoryl her blood work show 4.3 phosphorus and 10.3 calcium. (same normal range as previous)
The first test in 2010 was a fasted test, the last test was non fasted.
For my dog- I contribute her skin/coat issues as well as her minor Calcinosis Cutis to high cortisol that needed much tighter control than I provided. My dog needs a post under five to show improvement in her Calcinosis Cutis and her secondary skin issues well controlled.
Re: Calcinosis Cutis and Trilostane
Hi Addy,
Did your derm vet diagnose the CC? Do you remember how it was done? I wanted to mention that I made a mistake when I posted phosphorus. It should have been phosphate. I think phosphates are an element of phosphorus but they are two different elements.
Re: Calcinosis Cutis and Trilostane
Quote:
Dr. McKeever founded the veterinary dermatology program at the University of Minnesota , and served as the primary professor there for 27 years. Many of the veterinary dermatology specialists in Minnesota have studied with him at one time or another.
Zoe saw this dermatologist one time. He did a history and a physical exam. He did fine needle aspiration- cytology- on the hard white lumps- He diagnosed her with Calcinosis Cutis. He also took some skin samples with tape from her paws and did a scraping of her skin.
Re: Calcinosis Cutis and Trilostane
I posted in Pia's thread, but I'm going to post here, too, and keep up with anything and everything about CC. My poor Pia seems to have started with it. She's been on Vetoryl for just over a month, and I think I saw the first spot of what I'm guessing is CC before or right after her start, but it was a couple little patches that didn't change and then about a month after starting Vetoryl, I saw another small patch in front of her other ear canal and then found a few small spots on her side, and last night I found a big, about 2" long, ridge on Pia's upper back that was a ridge of "crud" with the hair still in the crud, and underneath it's raw, red and oozing. I gave her a bath less than a week ago, and saw absolutely nothing of this. She's a short-haired dog, a French bulldog, so I can't imagine that I'd have missed it.
I showed the young student and resident vets at Davis the smaller spots of this last Monday (our regular Davis vet was unavailable) and they didn't know what it was. (seriously???) On Wednesday Pia went to our local vet for a B12 shot, and when I pointed out the smaller ones she thought they were "calcium deposits" from Cushings. I don't know what to do next. Biopsy? Topical medication? Someone mentioned salt baths. I don't know what that is or how to do it. I can't put honey on Pia - our old blind dog would drive her crazy trying to lick it off. What has worked seems like such a mishmash of different things. My brain is fried and I can't seem to sort all the different things out. I really need help on this one.
Re: Calcinosis Cutis and Trilostane
Is it possible that dogs with cc might be on a dose that is too high?
I have noticed that not everyone specifies whether their ACTH tests were done fasting. If I hadn't included the information that I was told to fast my Rosie prior to the test, I would not have found out that it invalidates the test, specifically that it runs the risk of values being returned too high, prompting unnecessary increases in dosage and therefore risking an overdose.
I have also noticed that some dogs here are on quite high doses once a day. Somewhere I read that trilostane levels begin to drop off after about four hours, and that giving lower doses twice a day would keep levels more consistent and therefore control symptoms better.
I'm quite new here and I apologize if I'm bringing up things that have been already discussed elsewhere; I still have a lot of reading to do on this forum!
One thing I'm wondering is if the cc occurs mainly in pituitary or adrenal Cushing's, or equally in both?