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Case 2010-8

Dana Altenburger, MD Anne Chauvet, DVM Fidelma Kennedy, DVM Gary S Pearl, MD, PhD. Case 2010-8. History. The patient is a late teen male Bengal tiger that presented with a few week history of loss of balance and jaw drop MRI and labs were non-contributory

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Case 2010-8

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  1. Dana Altenburger, MD Anne Chauvet, DVM Fidelma Kennedy, DVM Gary S Pearl, MD, PhD Case 2010-8

  2. History The patient is a late teen male Bengal tiger that presented with a few week history of loss of balance and jaw drop MRI and labs were non-contributory Infectious disease titers were negative for tick borne disease and canine distemper virus He continued to decline, progressing to semicoma and euthanasia was elected

  3. Additional Information The brain weight was 230 g There was a small meningioma The brain was otherwise grossly unremarkable

  4. Gross brain

  5. Microscopic Brain

  6. Inclusion and Macrophages

  7. Inclusion in spinal cord

  8. Inclusion in Pons

  9. These inclusions were located in the cerebellum, pons, medulla and cervical spinal cord Cortex was spared

  10. Discussion

  11. LFB/PAS

  12. Immunohistochemistry • Click to edit Master text styles • Second level • Third level • Fourth level • Fifth level CDV

  13. Canine Distemper Virus Is a highly infectious morbillivirus within the paramyxovirus family Family includes measles Known to cause serious disease, with high mortality in susceptible species Number of species it has been known to effect has been increasing

  14. Canine Distemper Virus • Classically CDV is not pathogenic in lions and tigers • First reported as far back as the 1950s in Africa • First case in U.S. was in 1983 Though felines were not considered susceptible, seroconversion has been demonstrated in domestic cats with exposure to dogs with distemper Additional diagnostic aid came with the development of the CDV immunohistochemical stain • Superior to inclusions alone

  15. Risk Factors • Unknown • Theories include • Exposure to dogs • Immune suppression • Concurrent illness • Viral titers may be inaccurate with CDV infection • Biotype conversion of an otherwise self-limited infection

  16. Additional Considerations CDV vaccination should be considered in animals with potential for exposure

  17. Comments Dr Summers Utility of CDV titers? Additional comments

  18. Comments by Dr. Brian Summers

  19. 2010-8 BENGAL TIGER

  20. 986 DISTEMPER ENCEPHALITIS IN A LION

  21. 986 DISTEMPER IN A LION (GIANT CELL PNEUMONIA)

  22. 1994 REVIEW

  23. Tanzania Serengeti National Park, 1994 Ngorongono Crater, 2001

  24. References Palmer DG, Huxtable CRR and Thomas JB: Immunohistochemical demonstration of canine distemper virus antigen as an aid in the diagnosis of canine distemper encephalomyelitis. Research in Veterinary Science 49: 177-181, 1990 Myers DL, Zurbriggen A, Lutz H and Pospischil A: Distemper: not a new disease in lions and tigers. Clin Diagn Lab Immunol 4:180-184, 1997 Blythe LL, Schmitz JA, Roelke M and Skinner S: Chronic encephalomyelitis caused by canine distemper virus in a Bengal tiger. JAVMA 183:1159-1162, 1983. Wood SL, Thomson GW and Haines DM: Canine distemper virus-like infection in a captive African lioness. Vet J 36: 34-35, 1995.

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