Chelonians Flashcards

1
Q

What are the mechanism and clinical signs of acute ransom toxicity in tortoises?

A
Acute Ramson (Allium ursinum) Toxicosis in Captive Tortoises
Hellebuyck T, Simard J, Velde NV, Geerinckx L. Acute Ramson (Allium ursinum) Toxicosis in Captive Tortoises. Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery. 2019;29(1-2):34-9.

Allum spp plants assoc with severe hemolytic anemia.

MOA - Sulfur-containing compounds cause oxidative damage to RBC.

Other plant toxicities in reptiles - lillies, avocado, Digitalis spp, mistletoe.

Heinz bodies NOT observed (hallmark in other spp).

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2
Q

What husbandry/dietary changes mitigated GI perforations in a group of juvenile spiny softshell turtles?

A

Gastro-Duodenal Perforations and Coelomitis in a Group of Juvenile Spiny Softshell Turtles (Apalone spinifera)
Couture ÉL, Ferrell ST, Desmarchelier M, Lazure L, Lair S.
Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery. 2017;27(1-2):36-43.

Gastroduodenal impaction and perforation from excessive food consumption and large, abrasive foods.

Husbandry Recommendations:

Limited time feeding (remove food after 20-30 minutes)

Invertebrate prey smaller than the width of the reptile’s head

Freeze-dried shrimp less abrasive vs sun-dried

2 day fast per week

Conclusions: Feeding large amounts of abrasive food can cause gastrointestinal impaction, perforation, and fatal coelomitis in juvenile spiny softshell turtles.

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3
Q

What was observed in a study evaluating acupuncture points governing vessels 1 and 26 alone and in combo during anesthetic recovery of EBTs?

A

EVALUATION OF ACUPUNCTURE POINTS GOVERNING VESSELS 1 AND 26 ON ANESTHETIC RECOVERY OF EASTERN BOX TURTLES (TERRAPENE CAROLINA CAROLINA).
J Zoo Wildl Med. 2018 Dec;49(4):870-874.
Cerreta AJ, Walker ME, Harrison TM.

GV26 - Nasal philtrum
GV 1 - Between coccyx and anus

All tx groups had a shortened time to voluntary movement, response to limb extension, and anesthetic recovery compared to control (no accupuncture). There was no difference among the groups.

HR in the GV-26 group was higher.

Conclusions: GV-26, GV-26 and GV-1, and GV-26 and GV-1 electroacupuncture all shortened recovery times in box turtles anesthetized with an injectable protocol.

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4
Q

What factors were associated with high lactate in EBTs during a canine search adventure?

A

BLOOD LACTATE CONCENTRATIONS IN EASTERN BOX TURTLES (TERRAPENE CAROLINA CAROLINA) FOLLOWING CAPTURE BY A CANINE SEARCH TEAM
Klein K, Adamovicz L, Phillips CA, Allender MC.
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. 2021 Apr;52(1):259-67.

Higher lactate in turtles with Terrapene herpes 1 (no cs), quiet mentation, increased PCV, and increased capture and handling time.

Peak lactate was ~130 min after capture.

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5
Q

What was observed in a comparison of ax with ketamine-medetomidine and S-ketamine-medetomidine in testudo spp?

A

Preliminary Clinical Comparison of Anesthesia with Ketamine/Medetomidine and S-Ketamine/Medetomidine in Testudo spp.
Monika Bochmann, Sandra Wenger, Jean-Michel Hatt
J. of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery, 28(1):40-46 (2018).

S-ketamine 4x greater affinity for NMDA receptor = inc analgesia and anesthetic effects

Both ketamine and S-ketamine caused decreased HR, RR, muscle relaxation

No loss of response to noxious stimuli

S-ketamine had reduced palpebral at 30 min

No adverse effects

Body temp correlated to environment temp

Conclusions: Ketamine-medetomidine and S-ketamine-medetomidine both produced moderate anesthesia, bradycardia, bradypnea with no analgesia.

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6
Q

Intranuclear coccidian parasite of Testudines (TINC) has a predilection for which type of cell?

A

EXTENSION OF THE KNOWN HOST RANGE OF INTRANUCLEAR COCCIDIOSIS: INFECTION IN THREE CAPTIVE RED-FOOTED TORTOISES ( CHELONOIDIS CARBONARIA)
Stilwell JM, Stilwell NK, Stacy NI, Wellehan JF, Farina LL.
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. 2017 Dec;48(4):1165-71.

TINC has a predisposition for epithelial cells, causes widespread inflammation, necrosis, and epithelial hyperplasia.

Tortoises are the definitive host - Microgametocytes, macrogametocytes, and oocysts have been found.

Conclusions: Intranuclear coccidian parasite of Testudines (TINC) affects a wide variety of tortoises, causing multisystemic disease which was successfully treated in two red-footed tortoises with ponazuril.

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7
Q

Name three upper respiratory tract pathogens that are major causes of disease in chelonians.

A

CHARACTERIZING THE EPIDEMIOLOGY OF HISTORIC AND NOVEL PATHOGENS IN BLANDING’S TURTLES (EMYDOIDEA BLANDINGII)
Winter JM, Mumm L, Adamovicz LA, Andersson KE, Glowacki GA, Allender MC.
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. 2020 Nov;51(3):606-17.

URT infections major cause of dz in chelonians - Mycoplasma, ranavirus, herpesvirus.

Key Points:
Pathogens highest occurrence in adults>>> rare subadults, juveniles

Likely due to behaviors exhibited by age class (ie communicable disease is transmitted with increased contact, like during breeding season)

Emydoidea herpesvirus 1 (EBHV1) 22 animals, no illness, most during MAY, tended to cluster spatially

Tended to be seen in animals with limb abnormalities and absence of leach infestation

Herpesvirus disease may be seen because the limb abnormality has stressed the animal (difficulty foraging, recent injury etc)

May is breeding season, spend more time on land, likely why fewer leeches
Salmonella typhimurium, rarely positive, Causes illness in mammals

Novel mycoplasma identified in turtle w/ nasal discharge
Tortoise intranuclear coccidiosis (TINC) and ranaviruses

Conclusions: Adults more affected by infectious diseases, suspect due to increased horizontal transmission from interactions. EBHV1 had low prevalence and no illness, associated with decreased immune functioning and breeding season.

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8
Q

How does temperature affect ranavirus in juvenile chelonians (RES, MS map turtles, false map turtles, river cooters)?

A

EXPERIMENTAL TRANSMISSION OF FROG VIRUS 3–LIKE RANAVIRUS IN JUVENILE CHELONIANS AT TWO TEMPERATURES
Allender MC, Barthel AC, Rayl JM, Terio KA.
Journal of wildlife diseases. 2018 Oct;54(4):716-25.

All juvenile turtle spp had 100% mortality rate within 6-16 days. Nearly all died before clinical signs (one turtle was lethargic).

Higher mortality at higher temps in general.

FMT survived the longest.

MMT and RES at higher temp died sooner compared to same spp at lower temp.

No difference in survival time between turtles at higher or lower temp in FMT or RC groups.

Conclusion - Ranavirus kills juvenile turtles, usually without CS other than lethargy, and higher mortality is observed at high temps. MMT and RES died sooner at higher temps.

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9
Q

What type of herpesviruses are all reptilian herpes?

What was observed in a serosurvey of terrapene herpesvirus 1 in EBTs in TN and IL?

A

PREVALENCE OF TERRAPENE HERPESVIRUS 1 IN FREE-RANGING EASTERN BOX TURTLES (TERRAPENE CAROLINA CAROLINA) IN TENNESSEE AND ILLINOIS, USA
Kane LP, Allender MC, Archer G, Dzhaman E, Pauley J, Moore AR, Ruiz MO, Smith RL, Byrd J, Phillips CA.
Journal of wildlife diseases. 2017 Apr;53(2):285-95.

Background:
Herpesviruses are a large, enveloped viruses with a dsDNA genome

All reptilian herpes virus are Alphaherpesviruses

Terrapene herpesvirus 1 → upper respiratory signs in eastern box turtles

Terrapene herpesvirus 2 → fibropapilloma in a box turtle in FL

Key Points:

Prevalence of TeHV-1 in E box turtles in TN and IL was 31.3%

More positives in July in TN.

PCV, eosinophils, H:L ratio were higher and lymphocyte and monocytes were lower in positive turtles

Overall clinical signs were not associated with positive results.

Signs: nasal discharge, ocular discharge, ocular swelling, oral plaque, and respiratory distress

Conclusions: Eastern box turtles in TN and IL have a high prevalence of terrapene herpesvirus 1, which causes upper respiratory signs.

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10
Q

What copathogens were detected in free-ranging EBTs in IL and TN?

A

DETECTION OF COPATHOGENS IN FREE-RANGING EASTERN BOX TURTLES (TERRAPENE CAROLINA CAROLINA) IN ILLINOIS AND TENNESSEE
Archer GA, Phillips CA, Adamovicz L, Band M, Byrd J, Allender MC.
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. 2017 Dec;48(4):1127-34.

Four pathogens detected:
Ranavirus
Terrapine herpes 1
Mycoplasma
Adenovirus 1

TerHV1/Myco and TerHV1/BT Adv1 coninfection detected

NO occurence of Myco + BT Adv1 together

Adenovirus more common in juveniles.

Mycoplasma found more commonly in fall

TerHV1 more common in summer

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11
Q

What was found in a survey of blanding’s turtles for emydoidea herpesvirus 1 in IL?

Was there an association with clinical signs?

What sample is best for antemortem testing?

A

Epidemiology of Emydoidea herpesvirus 1 in free-ranging Blanding’s turtles (Emydoidea blandingii) from Illinois
Lindemann DM, Allender MC, Thompson D, Glowacki GA, Newman EM, Adamovicz LA, Smith RL.
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. 2019 Sep;50(3):547-56.

Chelonian herpesviruses:
Testudinid herpesvirus 1-4
Emydid herpesviruses (emydid HV-1,2, Glyptemy Hv-1,2, Terrapene Hv-1,2)
Lifelong infections and latency OR persistent infection with recurrent shedding
Newly identified Emydoidea herpesvirus 1 (EBHV1)

Key Points:
In Blanding’s turtles surveyed, EBHV1 qPCR prevalence of 11%

All females

Not associated with clinical signs, county

Positives most common in May, then Sep, then June (different from EBTs which are highest in July)

Sampling with oral swabs is best for antemortem

Conclusions: Emydoidea herpesvirus 1 can be detected in wild Blanding’s turtles with qPCR of oral swabs, especially highest in May.

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12
Q

What amoebic pathogen can cause sudden death in chelonians, lizards, and snakes?

A

A RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS OF AMOEBIASIS IN REPTILES IN A ZOOLOGICAL INSTITUTION
McFarland A, Conley KJ, Seimon TA, Sykes IV JM.
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. 2021 Apr;52(1):232-40.

Entamoeba invadens can cause sudden death in reptiles (chelonians, lizards, and snakes)

Direct lifecycle: ingest cyst → trophozoite attach to duodenal mucosa +/- invade wall and spread in blood

Fecal-oral transmission

Chelonians may be asymptomatic carriers or be clinically affected

Crocodilians may be asymptomatic carriers

Snakes develop clinical signs

Entamoeba ranarum causes clinical disease in amphibians (and one snake in this paper)

Entamoeba terrapinae was fatal in on chelonian in this study but is normally commensal in chelonians

Negative PCR in cases with histologic amoeba

Conclusions: Entamoeba spp.can be fatal in reptiles.

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13
Q

Do chelonians have urinary bladders?

What is stored in accessory bladders and how do they fill?

A

Positive Buoyancy Secondary to Gas Accumulation within the Accessory Bladders in a Florida Cooter (Pseudemys floridana floridana)
Scifo A, DeVoe RS, Goe A.
Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery. 2020;30(1):9-13.

All chelonians have bladders:
Terrestrial tortoises = large, bilobed bladder for fluid storage

Aquatic turtles = smaller bladder for water storage and buoyancy control

Bilateral ureters → urodeum → bladder or proctodeum

Accessory bladders = cloacal bursae = cloacal bladders

Paired, vascular structures in some aquatic and semiaquatic chelonians

Fill and empty through cloaca with water

Do not store urine

In aquatic species, lateral to urinary bladder and small

In semiaquatic species, large, filled with water through vent

Conclusions: All chelonians have bladders, but aquatic and semiaquatic turtles have accessory bladders that can fill with water through the vent.

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14
Q

What was the most common presentation for turtles in NC?

What factors were associated with risk of euthanasia/death?

A

MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY OF WILD TURTLES AT A NORTH CAROLINA WILDLIFE CLINIC: A 10-YEAR RETROSPECTIVE.
Sack A, Butler E, Cowen P, Lewbart GA.
J Zoo Wildl Med. 2017 Sep;48(3):716-724.

Box turtles most common

Vehicular trauma = most common presentation

Upper respiratory infections +/- aural abscesses were uncommon (5% cases)

URI cases were often eastern box turtles

Fishing hook trauma cases were most often sliders

Head trauma cases were most often snapping turtles

Had a better survival rate for head trauma than other species (maybe because injuries typically on jaws

Cooters were most likely to present as gravid females

Factors that increase the risk of euthanasia/death

Vehicular trauma
Head injuries
Midline injuries (spinal)
Myiasis

Snapping turtles did better with head trauma vs other spp.

Conclusions: Wild turtles present to rehab centers for a variety of reasons, and vehicular trauma, head traum, and open coelomic injuries decrease survival rate.

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15
Q

What was observed in a health assessment of free ranging chelonians in NY?

A

Health assessment of free-ranging chelonians in an urban section of the Bronx River, New York.
Aplasca AC, Titus V, Ossiboff RJ, Murphy L, Seimon TA, Ingerman K, Moser WE, Calle PP, Sykes IV JM.
Journal of wildlife diseases. 2019.

Environmental contaminants accumulate in different tissues:

Organochlorines, polychlorinated biphenyls: hepatic, adipose

Metals (except Pb): hepatic, renal, +/- others

Lead: erythrocytes, bone
Polychlorinated biphenyls can cause developmental deformities in snapping turtles

Organochlorines inhibits ATP and can cause conjunctivitis, otitis media, aural abscesses, lower lysozyme levels, and abnormal sexual development in chelonians

Lead impairs the activity of aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (part of heme synthesis)

Key Points:

Snapping turtles, compared to red-eared sliders, had:

More Haemogregarina (hemoparasite) and Placobdella parasitica (leech) 
Placobdella can transmit Haemogregarina 

Higher lead levels, higher selenium

Higher PCV

Novel Mycoplasma and novel chelonian herpesvirus

Red-eared sliders also had parasites, lead, Mycoplasma, and herpesvirus

No mercury, ranaviruses, nor adenoviruses detected

Conclusions: Common snapping turtles and red-eared sliders in the Bronx river had OCs, PCBs, lead, Mycoplasma, and herpesviruses with environmental contaminants higher in the snapping turtles.

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16
Q

What is the prognostic values of PCV and BG in chelonians? What combinations were associated with the highest odds of death?

A

Prognostic value of packed cell volume and blood glucose concentration in 954 client-owned chelonians
Violaine A. Colon, Nicola Di Girolamo
J Am Vet Med Assoc 2020;257:1265–1272

Increased odds of death in chelonians:

Anemia (risk increases with severity)

Hypoglycemia

Hyperglycemia (risk increases with severity)

Categories of risk: chelonians with the highest odds of death:
Severe hyperglycemia + severe anemia
Severe hypoglycemia + severe anemia
Mild hyperglycemia + severe anemia
Moderate hyperglycemia + polycythemia.

Conclusions: Blood glucose concentrations and PCV may be prognostic indicators for chelonian patients.

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17
Q

Which diagnostic tests were considered to be the most useful as a marker of inflammation in gopher tortoises?

A

DIAGNOSTIC PERFORMANCE OF INFLAMMATORY MARKERS IN GOPHER TORTOISES (GOPHERUS POLYPHEMUS)
Rosenberg JF, Hernandez JA, Wellehan JF, Crevasse SE, Cray C, Stacy NI.
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. 2018 Sep;49(3):765-9.

Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was the best marker of inflammation

Followed by mature heterophils, leukocytes, lactate, immature heterophils

Sick tortoises had a lower albumin:globulin ratio

Fibrinogen was NOT helpful in this species

Conclusions: Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was the best marker of inflammation in gopher tortoises.

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18
Q

What blood analytes can be influenced by refrigeration/freezing in RES?

A

Effects of time and storage temperature on selected biochemical analytes in plasma of red-eared sliders (Trachemys scripta elegans).
Eshar D, Avni-Magen N, Kaufman E, Beaufrère H.
Am J Vet Res. 2018 Aug;79(8):852-857.

Key Points:

There was no difference between 1 and 4 hours at room temperature.

There was increased variability in CK, glucose, and phosphorus when refrigerated or frozen.

There was an increase in AST, uric acid, and potassium when refrigerated or frozen.

Calcium and potassium in frozen samples were outside of the acceptable range for allowable total error.

Total protein increased when refrigerated for more than 24 hours.

Conclusions: Refrigerating and freezing samples for >8 hours may affect biochemical analytes.

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19
Q

What were the most common isolates in a retrospective of bacterial isolates from clinically ill chelonians and what drugs were they sensitive to?

A

Retrospective Evaluation of Bacterial Isolates from Clinically Ill Chelonians: 155 Cases
Musgrave KE, Mans C.
Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery. 2019;29(1-2):49-54.

Gram-negative bacteria comprised majority of isolates, Pseudomonas and E. Coli most common
Both are part of the normal gastrointestinal flora

Pseudomonas was most sensitive to fluoroquinolones

Escherichia coli was most sensitive to aminoglycosides

Take home message: Opportunistic, Gram-negative bacteria are the most common cause of bacterial infection in turtles.

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20
Q

What population of EBTs in TN and IL had higher rates of antibiotic resistance?

A

MULTI-DRUG RESISTANCE PATTERNS OF ENTERIC BACTERIA IN TWO POPULATIONS OF FREE-RANGING EASTERN BOX TURTLES (TERRAPENE CAROLINA CAROLINA)
Rasmussen C, Allender MC, Phillips CA, Byrd J, Lloyd T, Maddox C.
J Zoo Wildl Med. 2017 Sep;48(3):708-715

Cloacal swabs and CBC (from subcarapacial sinus) from free-ranging box turtles in TN (urban) and IL (rural) (n=90)

Gram negative isolates:
Citrobacter spp.: 69% resistant to Clavamox, 21% resistant to cefoxitin

No resistance in E. coli

Geography:
IL turtles less resistance to Clavamox, ampicillin, and cefoxitin

TN had higher MIC90 for chloramphenicol

Demographics:
Females had more gram-negative isolates resistant to ceftiofur

Juveniles had more gram-negative isolates resistant to ceftiofur

No differences in health parameters

Gram positive isolates:
Lactobacillales (Vagococcus, Enterococcus, Carnobacterium) isolated

Most isolates resistant to three classes (n=24), followed by two classes (n=12)

Demographics:
Females had more gram-positive isolates resistant to enrofloxacin and cefovecin

Juveniles had more gram-positive isolates resistant to gentamicin

Health Parameters:
WBC and TS had decreasing trend with increasing number of antibiotic classes resistant

Higher TS in turtles with marbofloxacin resistant bacteria

Lower TS in turtles with cefovecin susceptible bacteria compared to cefovecin resistant bacteria

Weight higher in turtles with marbofloxacin resistant Gram positive profile compared to marbofloxacin susceptible
Gram positive

Other studies in sea turtles have shown profiles of resistance in sea turtles
Overall, isolates from rural areas had greater susceptibility than urban turtles

Conclusion: Antimicrobial resistant organisms are present in wild eastern box turtles in Tennessee and Illinois, with higher rates of resistance seen in urban populations and females. WBCs and TS were decreased as Gram positive resistant bacteria increased.

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21
Q

What pathogen was found to have a high prevalence in emydid turtles in Missouri?

A

A QUANTITATIVE PCR ASSAY FOR A MYCOPLASMA FROM EMYDID TURTLES INDICATES HIGH PREVALENCE IN HEALTHY THREE-TOED BOX TURTLES (TERRAPENE CAROLINA TRIUNGUIS) FROM MISSOURI, USA
Sandmeier FC, Ruiz R, Leonard K, Bayer B, Dowd C, Urban T.
Journal of wildlife diseases. 2019 Jul;55(3):589-96.

Mycoplasma agassizii causes upper respiratory tract disease in Mojave desert, but many carry a low load normally

Eastern box turtles have serologic evidence of M. agassizii exposure but may actually be an unnamed emydid mycoplasma

Emydid mycoplasma also occurs at a high prevalence in three-toed box turtles

Key Points:
Of the wild E box turtles, 61% were positive for emydid mycoplasma

None were PCR positive for M. agassizii nor M. testudineum

Conclusions: Eastern box turtles have a high prevalence of emydid mycoplasma.

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22
Q

Discuss diagnostic testing options for mycoplasma URTD in chelonians.

A

COMPARISON OF CURRENT METHODS FOR THE DETECTION OF CHRONIC MYCOPLASMAL URTD IN WILD POPULATIONS OF THE MOJAVE DESERT TORTOISE (GOPHERUS AGASSIZII)
Sandmeier FC, Weitzman CL, Maloney KN, Tracy CR, Nieto N, Teglas MB, Hunter KW, DuPré S, Gienger CM, Tuma MW.
Journal of Wildlife Diseases. 2017 Jan;53(1):91-101.

Background:
Mycoplasma (M. agassizii and M. testudineum) can cause chronic upper respiratory tract disease in desert tortoise

M. agassizii is more common in the wild population

Antibody response and are slow in desert tortoises (max titers at 4-27 wks) and long lived (elevated titers >1yr)

Low level infections may not result in an antibody response

Key Points:
Most Mycoplasma-positive tortoises had mild or latent disease

Quantitative PCR (qPCR) appears to be best diagnostic technique to identify low intensity infection

Low agreement between qPCR and antibody likely because of low antibody responses

Conclusions: Mycoplasma URTD is a chronic, intermittent, low mortality disease, therefore don’t rely on one test to say there is no disease.

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23
Q

What diagnostic sample could be valuable for detecting ranavirus in a deceased autolyzed turtle carcass?

A

DETECTION OF RANAVIRUS USING BONE MARROW HARVESTED FROM MORTALITY EVENTS IN EASTERN BOX TURTLES (TERRAPENE CAROLINA CAROLINA).
Butkus CE, Allender MC, Phillips CA, Adamovicz LA.
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. 2017 Dec;48(4):1210-4.

FV3 is diagnosed by demonstrating viral presence in postmortem tissues or oral-cloacal swabs.

In chelonian, mass mortality events, the skeleton and shell are often the only remains, making diagnosis difficult.

Key Points:
Bone marrow was collected from by sterilely drilling into the marginal scutes

FV3 was detected in 14% of postmortem samples.

There was good agreement between the perimortem and postmortem samples in the fourteen turtles.

Two turtles were negative on oral swabs but positive on bone marrow possibly because oral shedding of FV3 is intermittent.

Conclusions: Sampling bone marrow by the drilling method described may be a good method in deceased chelonians to detect FV3 via qPCR.

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24
Q

Compare pros and cons of techniques for sex determination of chelonians (cloacoscopy vs cytoscopy vs anti-mullerian hormone vs celioscopy).

A

FIELD ANESTHESIA AND GONADAL MORPHOLOGY OF IMMATURE WESTERN SANTA CRUZ TORTOISES (CHELONOIDIS PORTERI).
Emmel ES, Rivera S, Cabrera F, Blake S, Deem SL.
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. 2021 Jan;51(4):848-55.

Cloacoscopy - Minimimally invasive, challenging to ID penis vs clitoris

Cystoscopy - Less invasive, light anesthesia, short recovery; Difficult visualizing through bladder, emesis/bladder rupture complications, sometimes poor accuracy.

AMH - Only need small volume, accurate in hatchlings (only found in males); Less accurate in juveniles.

Celioscopy - Accurate; Requires equipment, invasive.

Endoscopic Sexing Technique:

Hold in right lateral recumbency with hind leg extended

Local lidocaine block in the prefemoral fossa

Sharp skin incision with scalpel, followed by blunt dissection with mosquito hemostat

Insert scope and use LRS for insufflation

Suture with 3-0 Monocryl in horizontal mattress

Western Santa Cruz tortoise males’ testicles were oval, red-pink, and tightly adhered to the kidney

Not lobular and yellow like in desert tortoises

Females did not have primordial follicles (seen in other species when immature)

Conclusions: Celioscopy can be used in Western Santa Cruz tortoises in the field, but need to know species anatomy (males = red-pink ovals; females = no primordial follicles).

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25
Q

What parameters were best to predict BCS in EBTs evaluated with CT?

A

BODY CONDITION OF EASTERN BOX TURTLES (TERRAPENE CAROLINA CAROLINA) EVALUATED BY COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY.
dePersio S, Allender MC, Dreslik MJ, Adamovicz L, Phillips CA, Willeford B, Kane L, Joslyn S, O’Brien RT.
J Zoo Wildl Med. 2019 Jun 13;50(2):295-302.

Key Points:
Mass alone or mass and carapace width were the best variables to predict body condition score

Previous unvalidated models for chelonian BCS are likely inaccurate

In sea turtles, carapace length and mass are the best indicators of body condition index

Conclusions: Mass and carapace width are the best predictors of body condition index.

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26
Q

How did 25OHVitD3 correlate with UVB in EBTs?

A

CHARACTERIZING THE 25-HYDROXYVITAMIN D STATUS OF TWO POPULATIONS OF FREE-RANGING EASTERN BOX TURTLES (TERRAPENE CAROLINA CAROLINA)
Watson MK, Byrd J, Phillips CA, Allender MC.
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. 2017 Sep;48(3):742-7.

Omnivorous reptiles obtain vit D from diet or secondary exposure to UVB radiation.

Vitamin D3 in skin has a longer half-life than dietary vitamin D3 because it skin D3 is 100% protein bound

Recommended method of measuring Vit D is 25-OHD3.

Key Points:

Vitamin D3 was positively correlated with UVB at time of capture.

No correlation with latitude, calcium, Ca:P, age, or sex

Conclusions: 25-OHD3 levels in wild eastern box turtles were correlated with UVB levels at the time of capture.

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27
Q

Describe how a visual scoring system can be used to ID and quantify anemia in male EBTs.

A

ASSESSMENT OF A VISUAL SCORING SYSTEM FOR IDENTIFYING AND QUANTIFYING ANEMIA IN MALE EASTERN BOX TURTLES (TERRAPENE CAROLINA CAROLINA).
Cerreta AJ, Mehalick ML, Stoskopf MK, Dombrowski DS, Lewbart GA.
J Zoo Wildl Med. 2018 Dec;49(4):977-982

FAffa MAlan CHArt (FAMACHA) is used in small ruminant species to estimate anemia based on conjunctival color

Male eastern box turtles have an non-pigmented iris, which causes it to have a red hue

Key Points:
There was a strong correlation between eye-color score and PCV. (Lighter = more anemic)

Using 5 or 6 color options resulted in less variable and more specific assessments than 9 color options.

5 or 6 options were highly specific (100%) but not sensitive (30-44%) for anemic EBT

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28
Q

Describe the best approach to the stomach for celiotomy in snapping turtles. What about sea turtles?

A

SURGICAL ANATOMY OF CELIOTOMY APPROACHES TO THE STOMACH IN THE COMMON SNAPPING TURTLE (CHELYDRA SERPENTINA).
Jimenez IA, Hermanson JW, Childs-Sanford SE.
J Zoo Wildl Med. 2019 Mar 1;50(1):82-88.

Options for surgical removal of GI foreign bodies in chelonians:

Plastron osteotomy; may not have good access to the stomach because of limited organ mobility

Prefemoral celiotomy

Axillary celiotomy

Key Points:
Left axillary approach: 4 cm adjacent to plastron edge

Required transection of superficial muscle bellies to see coelomic membrane

Greater curvature stomach visualized but not easily exteriorized

Left prefemoral: 4 cm adjacent to plastron edge

Fascia excised and coelom penetrated easily

Able to exteriorize duodenum and exteriorize stomach

Simple and atraumatic

Conclusion: Celiotomy to access stomach for surgery in snapping turtles is recommended as prefemoral approach in snapping turtles.

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29
Q

Discuss effects of long-term oral clarithromycin administration in chelonians with subclinical mycoplasma infection.

A

Long-term Oral Clarithromycin Administration in Chelonians with Subclinical Mycoplasma spp. Infection
Rettenmund CL, Boyer DM, Orrico WJ, Parker SG, Wilkes RP, Seimon TA, Paré JA.
Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery. 2017;27(1-2):58-61.

Mycoplasma agassizii and Mycoplasma testudineum = agents of contagious upper respiratory tract disease (UTRD) in tortoises

Mycoplasma testudinis = asymptomatic infection

M. agassizzi and M. testudienum affect Gopher tortoises

Can find mycoplasma in conjunctival swabs of normal chelonians

Intermittent shedding of Mycoplasma, so PCR can give false negatives

Clarithromycin is macrolide- used to successfully treat M. agassizii in desert tortoises in another paper (took 6 mo)

Good intracellular penetration because it travels in phagocytes to sites of infection

Accumulates in respiratory lining cells and secretions

Conclusions: Long-term clarithromycin PO is safe but does not stop shedding of Mycoplasma in Forsten’s tortoises or Sulawesi forest turtles.

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30
Q

Discuss absorption of ponazuril in red-footed tortoises.

A

A PRELIMINARY ANALYSIS OF PROLONGED ABSORPTION RATE OF PONAZURIL IN RED-FOOTED TORTOISES, CHELONOIDIS CARBONARIA
Benge SL, Heinrichs MT, Crevasse SE, Mahjoub B, Peloquin CA, Wellehan JF.
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. 2018 Sep;49(3):802-5.

TINC (Testudine intranuclear coccidiosis)- first found in radiated tort in 1990

Systemic disease, affects multiple organ systems: GI, resp, endocrine, lymphoid

Coccidia associated with inflammation and necrosis

Similar to Sarcocystis neurona (equine protozoal myeloencephalitis)

High mortality

Ponazuril inhibits all developmental stages of coccidia

Key Points:

Prolonged and variable oral absorption (continual absorption over an entire week!)

20mg/kg did not reach Cmax consistent with effect in mammals

Suspect inadequate dosing of ponazuril reason no documented cases of tortoise clearing TINC

Highest concentration of the drug was at 168 hours

Take Home Message: Red footed tortoises did not reach mammalian Cmax necessary to treat coccidial disease at a dose of 20mg/kg. The hope was that ponazuril could be used to treat TINC

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31
Q

Discuss efficacy of topical emodepside and praziquantel vs nematodes in captive tortoises.

A

Efficacy of a Topical Formulation Containing Emodepside and Praziquantel (Profender®, Bayer) against Nematodes in Captive Tortoises
Tang PK, Pellett S, Blake D, Hedley J.
Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery. 2017 Dec;27(3-4):116-22.

Oxyurids have a direct life cycle and are host specific
Inhabit lower intestinal tract of tortoises

High levels have been associated with fatal post-hibernation anorexia

Most common ascarid in herbivorous tortoises = Angusticaecum holopterum

Direct life cycle after ingestion of embryonated eggs

Low levels are likely insignificant, but heavy burdens can cause intestinal obstruction and perforation

Fenbendazole is a common oral antiparasitic in tortoises, but can have negative clinicopathologic effects

Heteropenia, transient hypoglycemia, hyperuricemia, and hyperphosphatemia (source below)

Potential for reduced fenbendazole efficacy in chelonians

Emodepside is a cyclooctadepsipeptide with activity against gastrointestinal nematodes
Triggets inhibitory neurotransmitter release from presynaptic membrane → flaccid paralysis in nematodes

Displayed efficacy against a variety of nematodes in a wide variety of species

Praziquantel has anthelmintic activity against trematodes and cestodes

Increases permeability of calcium channels to cause an influx of calcium across muscle/tegumental membranes of parasites

Ivermectin is a parenteral anthelmintic which in chelonians can cause paresis, flaccid paralysis, hepatic lipidosis, nephrotoxicity, and death

Key Points:
Oxyurid were not changed at day 14, but decreased by ~60% at day 33

Delayed, moderate anthelmintic activity

Suboptimal temperatures may have inhibited drug absorption

Ascarids reduced by 67% at day 14 (Not enough samples for day 33)

Conclusion: Profender produced delayed, moderate anthelmintic activity in tortoises and may be an option to reduce but not eliminate oxyurid burden in tortoises when oral medications not a treatment option.

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32
Q

Discuss pros of capillary zone electrophoresis in chelonians.

A

Buscaglia, N. A., Inman, D. N., Chen, S., Arheart, K. L., & Cray, C. (2021). Partial hematology, biochemistry, and protein electrophoresis reference intervals for captive spotted turtles (clemmys guttata). Journal of zoo and wildlife medicine, 52(2), 704-709.

Protein electrophoresis - semiautomated agarose gel electrophoresis traditionally used.

Capillary zone electrophoresis - Increased precision of fraction quantitation, better resolution of new protein fractions, easier to use, completely automated, faster results, smaller sample can be run.

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33
Q

Discuss pros of capillary zone electrophoresis in chelonians.

A

Buscaglia, N. A., Inman, D. N., Chen, S., Arheart, K. L., & Cray, C. (2021). Partial hematology, biochemistry, and protein electrophoresis reference intervals for captive spotted turtles (clemmys guttata). Journal of zoo and wildlife medicine, 52(2), 704-709.

Protein electrophoresis - semiautomated agarose gel electrophoresis traditionally used.

Capillary zone electrophoresis - Increased precision of fraction quantitation, better resolution of new protein fractions, easier to use, completely automated, faster results, smaller sample can be run.

It is possible to compare results of CZE using serum and plasma.

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34
Q

Compare and contrast options for venipuncture in tortoises.

A

COMPARISON OF SUBCARAPACIAL SINUS AND BRACHIAL VEIN PHLEBOTOMY SITES FOR BLOOD COLLECTION IN FREERANGING GOPHER TORTOISES (GOPHERUS POLYPHEMUS)
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 52(3): 966–974, 2021 - Neiffer, Dipl ACZM, et al.

Higher brachial vein mean values for most parameters. Attributed to greater hemodilution of subcarapacial samples with lymph.

Subcarapacial prone to lymph dilution. Can collect larger samples, allows for more rapid processing and does not require chemical restraint. Assoc with serious complications i.e. paralysis.

All CBC parameters were higher in brachial vein samples except for lymphocytes (high in lymph, SC). All plasma chem, EPH, and vitamin parameters higher in brachial vein samples except NaCl and BUN.

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35
Q

What organism releases brevetoxins? Symptoms? Treatment?

A

INTRAVENOUS LIPID EMULSION TREATMENT REDUCES SYMPTOMS OF BREVETOXICOSIS IN TURTLES (TRACHEMYS SCRIPTA). JZWM 50(1): 2019
Cocilova, Flewelling, Granholm, Manire and Milton

Karenia brevis - Brevitoxicosis

Animals treated with IL 30 min after brevetoxin exposure had greatly reduced symptoms within first 2 hrs. Fully recovered within 24 hrs.

Animals receiving ILE first showed little to no clinical signs post exposure.

Increase observed in brevetoxin in bile and feces 24h post ILE tx vs non treatment exposure control.

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36
Q

Describe Chelonian taxonomy.

What taxa are they most closely related to?

What are the two suborders?

When are the terms turtle, tortoise, and terrapin used?

A

F8 Chelonians; Mader 2019 - Ch. 7 Chelonian Taxonomy, Anatomy, and Physiology

  • Chelonians (turtles, tortoises, terrapins)
    • Diapsids – have two temporal fenestra
    • Sister clade to Archosaurs (crocodilians, birds, extinct dinosaurs)
    • Less closely related to Lepidosaurs (lizards, snakes, amphisbaenids, tuataras)
    • Most highly endangered of any of the major vertebrate groups.
      • Threats – hunting, traditional medicine, pets, intro of invasive spp, disease, anthropogenic trauma, fisheries, habitat degradation, fragmentation.
  • Taxonomy: Chelonia
    • Suborder Cryptodira (11 families, 250+ spp) - Hidden-neck turtles
      • Can retract head and neck straight back into shell, hiding neck
      • Includes sea turtles although unable to retract
    • Family Carettochelyidae: Pig-nosed turtle
    • Family Cheloniidae: Hard-shelled sea turtles
    • Family Chelydridae: Snapping turtles
    • Family Dermatemydidae: Central American river turtles
    • Family Dermochelyidae: Leatherback sea turtle
    • Family Emydidae: Box turtles, pond turtles, map turtles, wood turtles, terrapins, sliders, cooters
    • Family Geoemydidae: Asian river, lead, roofed, or Asian box turtles
    • Family Kinosternidae: Mud and musk turtles
    • Family Platysternidae: Big-headed turtle
    • Family Testudinidae: Land tortoises
    • Family Trionychidae: Softshell turtles
  • Suborder Pleurodira (3 families, 80+ spp) - Side-necked turtles
    • Not fully able to retract neck, fold it sideways
    • Family Chelidae: Austro-American side-necked and snake-necked turtles
      • i.e. Comon snake-neck turtle, mata mata
    • Family Pelomedusidae: Afro-American side-neck turtles
      • i.e. African helmeted turtle
    • Family Podocnemididae: Madagascar big-headed turtles, big-headed Amazon river turtles, South American side-neck river turtles
  • Common names vary:
    • Tortoise – typically terrestrial i.e. family Testudinidae; Australians will refer to turtles as tortoises, UK terrapin refers to FW chelonians, turtle refers to marine, tortoise refers to terrestrial.
    • North America – terrapin used for single spp (diamondback terrapin), all other aquatic turtles called turtles.
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37
Q

Describe the musculoskeletal anatomy of chelonians.

What are the two parts of the shell?

How do scutes grow? How are they shed? How are they numbered?

What species have soft shells? What makes these shells softer than other turtles?

What are the three parts of the pectoral girdle?

A
  • Musculoskeletal system
    • Shell – upper carapace, lower plastron, joined laterally by bony bridges
      • Carapace - ~50 bones derived from ribs, vertebrae, dermal elements
      • Plastron – 9 bones from clavicles, coracoids, interclavicles, gastralia (ribs)
      • Most spp have keratinized epithelium covering a thin dermis layer consisting of collagen fibers, melanophores, vessels, and nerves, beneath which is dermal bone.
      • Scutes – superficial layer of keratin
        • Staggered, seams between not directly over bone
        • New scutes produced with each major growth period
          • Terrestrial chelonians retain scutes
          • Aquatic/semiaquatic chelonians shed scutes
        • Grow outward from central nucleus (areola)
        • Each year, new scute forms beneath previous year’s
          • Outer edge will form annulus (growth ring)
          • Nutritional deficiencies – inversion of annuli
          • Counting annuli not accurate for determination of age
        • Scute nomenclature – Fig. 7.23
      • Shell modifications depending on spp
        • Leatherback sea turtles, softshell turtles, Fly River turtles – scutes replaced by leathery skin (alpha keratin)
          • All other turtles both alpha and beta keratin
        • Hatchling tortoises have fontanelles b/t carapacial bones, fuse with age
        • Some spp i.e. pancake tortoises retain fenestrae
        • Plastronal hinges i.e. box turtles, spider tortoises, mud turtles
        • Caudal carapacial hinge – hinged-back tortoises
    • Chelonians = only extant vertebrates with pectoral and pelvic girdles within ribcage
      • Tripartite rectilinear pectoral girdle
        • Dorsoventral scapula
        • Ventromedial acromium process
        • Ventrocaudal corcoid (procoracoid)
      • Vertebrae are incorporated into the carapace from first thoracic vertebra caudally to coccygeal vertebra.
    • Marine spp and the Fly River turtle have elongated metacarpals and phalanges (flippers)
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38
Q

Describe the respiratory system of chelonians.

Where do the nares open into?

Do they have complete or incomplete tracheal rings? What else is important about their tracheal anatomy?

Where are the lungs located? What type of lungs do chelonians have?

What is the peak airway pressure recommended for turtles?

Which phase of respiration is active?

What are some of the factors that make it difficult for turtles to remove secretions, infections, or FB from their lungs?

A
  • Respiratory system
    • Obligate nasal breathers – open-mouth breathing is pathologic
    • Complete tracheal rings
    • Cryptodiran turtles – short trachea, bifurcation is mid-cervical
      • Cranial bifurcation and complete tracheal rings enable breathing unimpeded when neck is withdrawn. May be a hazard for intubation.
    • Lungs adherent to carapace, dorsal
      • Ventrally separated by septum horizontale – attached to liver and GIT
        • Pleuroperitoneal/coelomic cavity
      • Multicameral (partitioned), saccular, 3-11 chambers dep on family
      • Reticular surface, smooth muscle and connective tissue
      • Large lung volume, advantage as hydrostatic organ for aquatic turtles
      • Three-toed box turtles, relatively small tidal volumes coupled with high respiratory rates.
      • Peak airway pressures during anesthesia recommended < 10 cm H20
      • Antagonistic muscles decrease or increase lung and visceral volume
      • Gular pumping to assist olfaction, not typically ventilation (except some aquatic spp)
      • In submerged snapping turtle – active inspiration, expiration passive.
        • On land, passive inspiration, active expiration.
      • Some aquatic turtles – supplemental cloacal, buccopharyngeal, or cutaneous respiration for prolonged submergence.
      • Long periods of apnea make induction of gas anesthesia difficult.
      • Open fractures of shell with lung exposure do not typically result in obvious respiratory distress.
      • Many factors make removing secretions or FB from lungs difficult:
        • Termination of mucociliary elevator outside the glottis.
        • Poor drainage through dorsally located bronchi.
        • Compartmentalization of lungs.
        • Large potential space within the lungs.
        • Lack of a complete muscular diaphragm to cough.
      • Pneumonia can be difficult to manage and life threatening

Zoo Path

  • ● Nares open into paired vestibules or nasal passages (no sinuses, turbinates)
  • o Mucosa - keratinized epithelium that transitions to multilayered olfactory epithelium dorsally & ciliated epithelium w/ mucus glands ventrally
  • ● Trachea short, bifurcates early into bronchi 🡪 open into singular saccular lung lobes (R,L) 🡪 subdivided into multiple variably sized compartments by smooth muscle trabeculae and smaller faveoli
  • o Lungs firmly attached dorsally to carapace & separated from coelomic cavity by fibrous membrane (septum horizontale or pleuroperitoneal membrane)
  • o No diaphragm - can’t cough; clearance of lower resp. infection/inflammation nearly impossible
  • o Some aquatic species use air in lungs for buoyancy control
  • o Evidence (controversial) some aquatic spp. have marginal extrapulmonary gas exchange (moving water through oral and cloacal cavities)
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39
Q

Describe the gastrointestinal anatomy of chelonians.

What is unique about the sea turtle esophagus?

Describe their intestinal anatomy.

Why do foreign bodies get stuck in the transverse colon?

How many liver lobes do they have?

What factors affect GI transit time?

A
  • Digestive system
    • Most terrestrial spp herbivorous
    • Aquatic species carnivorous, omnivorous - Numerous exceptions
    • No teeth, swallow bite-sized pieces, saliva is not enzymatic
    • Esophagus is ciliated
      • Sea turtles – large esophageal papillae
    • SI relatively short vs mammals
      • LI – primary fermentation site in tortoises, includes cecum, colon
      • Cecum lacks mesenteric attachments
      • Transverse colon has wider mesenteric attachment to stomach, gives dorsoventral mobility
        • Heavy ingested FB sink ventrally in the transverse colon, become entrapped, and accumulate at the descrnding colon.
        • FB removal facilitated by milking material anterograde into cecum, easiest to exteriorize.
    • Stomach, SI, pancreas produce digestive enzymes
    • Liver – two major lobes, envelops GB on right
      • May have normal melanomacrophages
      • Pale yellow to tan may indicate hepatic lipidosis or normal vitellogenesis in females.
      • One study did not detect postprandial increase in bile acids in RES.
    • Pancreas directly contacts spleen (cryptodirans) or separate in mesentery with duodenum (pleurodirans)
    • Factors affecting GI transit time:
      • Temperature, spp, feed frequency, food size, water or fiber content of food.
        • Transit time omnivores < carnivores < herbivores.
      • Captive diets generally move faster, especially in tortoises.
      • Loggerhead sea turtles, GI contrast 2-3 weeks
      • Metoclopramide, cisapride, and erythromycin did not significantly reduce GI transit time compared with water in desert tortoises.

Zoo Path

● No teeth - keratinized horny ridges line the upper (rhamphotheca) and lower (dentary) beak

● Green sea turtles - esophagus lacks mucus glands, Cd-directed conical papillae help retain ingested prey

● Several marine turtle species have a crop to retain food

● GI tract simple, suspended from dorsal midline by a single mesentery

● Liver has 2 main lobes w/ gallbladder w/in or along caudal border of R lobe

o Histo – hepatocytes in discrete trabeculae, but distinct lobular architecture absent

o Melanomacrophages considered normal cellular population in liver

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40
Q

Describe the anatomy of the urinary tract in chelonians.

Where are the kidneys located?

How well do they concentrate urine?

What are the three nitrogenous wastes? What groups excrete which product?

Do chelonians have a bladder?

A
  • Kidneys – retrocoelomic, deep to caudodorsal carapace, posterior to acetabulum.
    • Except marine turtles – anterior to acetabulum.
    • Metanephric, no loop of Henle.
      • Cannot concentrate urine above that of plasma.
      • Urine not sterile.
      • Ammonia and urea require large amounts of water for excretion.
    • Renal portal system – PK studies have shown no significant difference in drug metabolism if injections are given in caudal region vs cranial limbs.
  • Differences from mammals markers (BUN, Cr) making detection of kidney disease difficult:
    • Amino-ureotelic: Marine and highly aquatic FW turtles excrete more ammonia and urea than uric acid.
    • Ureo-uricotelic: Semiaquatic turtles excrete mostly urea.
    • Ureo-uricotelic to uricotelic: Terrestrial chelonians produce more insoluble uric acid and urates passed in semisolid state.
    • Healthy sea turtles very high BUN vs other chelonians (> 100 mg/dL).
    • Healthy herbivorous tortoises have basic urine.
    • Tortoises in catabolic state acidic urine, not specific to disease.
  • Urinary bladder
    • Some spp accessory urinary bladders.
    • Terrestrial chelonians – largest, bilobed, thin, membranous distensible, ciliated, mucus secreting wall.
      • Used for water storage and K/Na exchange during drought.
      • Care should be taken to prevent urination when handling wild tortoises, could result in significant fluid losses for that individual.
    • Aquatic chelonians – small bladders, thicker walls.
    • Cloaca, colon, UB can reabsorb urinary water.
    • Bladder prolapse may occur with uroliths or colonic FB.

Zoo Path:

● Paired lobular kidneys in retrocoelomic space; no distinct cortex and medulla grossly

o Fewer nephrons, no loops of Henle 🡪 chelonians cannot concentrate urine

o Proportion of N waste excreted as NH3, urea, & uric acid varies by spp., habitat, season, diet, age

▪ FW turtles excrete equal amts of ammonia and urea

▪ Sea turtles also excrete uric acid

▪ Tortoises (esp. desert spp.) excrete far more uric acid & K+-urate salts in semisolid state

o Ureters enter dorsal urodeum 🡪 excreted or diverted into urinary bladder

▪ Urinary bladder - ciliated epithelium w/ mucus glands

▪ In some spp. - 2 additional small accessory bladders lateral to urodeum

▪ Bladder - water reservoir, resorptive capacity in some spp.

o BUN has limited utility as marker of renal fxn, except perhaps in aquatic spp.

▪ BUN also ↑ during hibernation in desert tortoises (↓ H2O intake, protein catabolism)

▪ Urea - better for hydration status, water availability than kidney function

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41
Q

Describe the reproductive anatomy of chelonians.

Where are the gonads located?

What stimulates spermatogenesis?

What stimulates vittelogenesis?

What hormone regulates seasonal reproduction in both sexes?

What is the hormone that peaks during oviposition?

What are the two patterns of temperature-dependent sex determination in chelonians?

What are some examples of sexual dimorphisms in chelonians?

A
  • Gonads.
    • Paired, anterior to kidney.
    • Fertilization is internal.
    • Seasonal hormone patterns.
    • Spermatogenesis is temp and testosterone dependent.
      • Rising in spring/summer, falling in fall/winter.
      • Spermatozoa may be retained through winter.
      • Sperm may be stored months to years by female in albumin gland within isthmus of oviduct.
        • Following fertilization, produces membranes/albumin around ovum.
        • Shell gland produces shell membranes and eggshell.
    • Ovary/follicles.
      • Previtellogenic follicles – secrete estradiol in response to pituitary gonadotropin.
        • Estradiol stimulates liver to secrete vitellogenic protein.
          • Taken up by maturing follicles.
        • Nesting F sea turtles have higher TP, alb, glob, Ca, P, TG, and cholesterol.
      • Testosterone regulates seasonal reproduction in males and females.
        • Follicular testonsterone increases with maturation of follicle.
          • Biphasic increase associated with spring and fall mating.
          • Falls after ovulation, females become nonreceptive.
          • Ovulation occurs after courtship and mating, then within days of nesting.
            • Associated with LH and progesterone surges.
      • Single or multiple clutches of eggs dep on spp.
      • Arginine vasotocin peaks during first oviposition, baseline within an hour.
      • Follicles that have not ovulated undergo atresia.
        • Reduces in size, becomes a corpora albicans.
        • Repeated folliculogenesis and atresia without production of eggs may lead to coelomitis.
        • Thyroxine (T4) peaks in both sexes following hibernation.
          • Males undergo second peak in late summer as male combat and spermatogenesis return.
      • Temperature dependent sex determination
      • Pattern 1a: Typical, produces females at higher temperatures, males at lower temps
      • Pattern 2: Females at both high and low temps and males at IM temp.
        • Smaller gender typically occurs at cooler temps.
        • Some turtles have genetic sex determination:
          • Common snake-necked turtle, Wood turtle
    • Phallus
      • Spade-shaped.
      • Ventral floor of the proctodeum, no urethra.
      • Seminal groove for transport of sperm.
      • No inversion occurs as it does in squamates.
      • Males often vocalize during copulation.
      • Typically last part of the turtle to be desensitized under general anesthesia.
    • Sexual dimorphism.
      • Coloration, tail or claw length, size, shell shape.
        • Males have longer, thicker tails, distal vent, curved or concave plastron, anal notch on plastron deeper than female.
        • Cryptodiran turtles, most significantly larger - F.
        • Males typically larger in larger-sized spp.
        • Male aquatic turtles tend to have elongated foreclaws for courting.
        • Males of some marine spp have hooked claw on front flipper.
        • Female leopard tortoises have elongated rear claws.
        • Box turtle males have red iris vs yellow/brown of females.
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42
Q

Describe the reproduction of chelonians.

How big are their clutches?

What biochemical changes are appreciated during vitellogenesis?

How can oviposition be facilitated?

A
  • Reproduction (F8):
    • All chelonian lay shelled eggs on land.
    • Clutch size may range from 1-100+.
    • Size and number of clutches per season may be influenced by nutritional status.
    • Incubation times vary.
    • Most spp have temp-dependent sex det.
      • Generally females produced at higher temps, males at lower temps.
    • Plasma Ca may exceed 25 mg/dL during folliculogenesis.
      • Globs may > 8 and chol 200+.
    • Can place in shallow water and administer oxytocin IM or ICe to try to stimulate laying.
    • Retention of shelled eggs in otherwise healthy animal not a concern.
    • Anorexic or lethargic, otherwise systemically affected, can administer fluids, Ca gluc, repeat oxytocin with prostaglandin.
    • Can assess repro status of wild females with US.
      • Don’t have to expose the ovary to multiple radiographic events.
      • Presence of mature ovarian follicle does not ensure ovulation will occur.
        • Some females are capable of resorbing preovulatory follicles.
    • Primary repro issue in males is phallus prolapse.
      • Cleanse, manually replace and purse string.
      • May require amputation.
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43
Q

Describe the cardiovascular anatomy of chelonians.

How many chambers do they have?

What are their great vessels? What do they each supply?

What physiologic changes occur when the turtle is diving?

A
  • Cardiovascular system
    • Four-chambered heart: one sinus venosus (pacemaker), two atria, one ventricle with three subchambers (cavas).
      • Segregate oxygenated and deoxygenated blood.
        • Deoxygenated blood returns to sinus venosus (receives blood from right and left cranial vena cavas, caudal vena cava, left hepatic vein).
        • Right atrium >> left atrium, no auricles.
        • Great vessels (from ventricle) – two aortas, common pulmonary artery or trunk.
          • Left trunk is pulmonary artery, splits into each lung.
          • Middle trunk (left aorta) – supplies viscera
          • Right trunk (right aorta) has brachiocephalic trunk arising from base, bifurcates into subclavian arteries.
            • Landmarks for thyroid gland.
          • Left and right aortae join caudal to heart to form dorsal aorta.
      • Located on midline except in Trionychidae – displaced to right.
      • Bordered laterally by acromium and coracoid processes.
      • More pericardial fluid vs mammals.
      • Ligamentous gubernaculum cordis attaches ventricular apex to pericardial sac.
        • Ventral midline coelomic mebrane incision can inadvertently enter pericardial sac.
      • Apnea and diving
        • HR and pulmonary blood flow decreases by 50% and 80%, 150% increase in pulmonary resistance.
        • Results in more intracardiac R-L shunting.
        • When breathing, HR and pulmonary blood flow increase two and three fold, results in net L to R shunt.
      • Renal portal system of unknown clinical significance.

Zoo Path

● Heart - pericardial sac connected to apex of heart via gubernaculum cordis; 4 chambers (sinus venosus, 2 atria, ventricle)

o Ventricle - 3 interconnected chambers (cavum venosum, cavum arteriosum, cavum pulmonale)

o Purkinje fibers absent

o Contractions initiated via sinus venosus, propagated by arrangement of myofibers

o Muscular sphincters in pulmonary arteries of some marine spp.

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44
Q

Describe the anatomy of the chelonian nervous system.

What is unique about reptilian meningeal anatomy?

What structure is homologous to teh neocortex?

How many cranial nerves do they have?

A
  • Nervous system
    • CNS – brain and SC
      • Brain – olfactory bulb, cerebral cortex, thalamus, hypothalamus, pituitary, optic lobes, cerebellum, medulla.
      • Most reptiles lack neocortex, some evidence dorsal cortex homologous in chelonians.
      • Traumatic midline carapace injuries may affect the spinal cord.
      • Bran and SC surrounded by two meningeal layers – inner leptomeninx and outer dura mater. CSF in between (site of intrathecal injections).
      • Reptiles lack subarachnoid space.
      • Epidural space is rich in vascular supply, does not contain CSF.
      • Extreme tolerance for hypoxia and anoxia.
      • 12 cranial nerves.
        • Nervous terminalis considered nerve 0.
    • PNS
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45
Q

Describe the endocrine anatomy of chelonians.

Where is the thyroid located?

Where are the parathyroids located? Where are the ultimobrachial bodies?

Where are the adrenal glands?

A
  • Nonreproductive endocrine system
    • Thyroid gland – unpaired, anterior to heart
    • Thymus – anterior to thyroid gland
      • Not part of endocrine system
    • Two pairs of parathyroid glands – one within thymus, one near aortic arch.
      • Parathyroid hormones regulate calcium and phosphorus metabolism.
      • Within PG are paired ultimobranchial bodies.
        • Homologous with thyroid parafollicular cells of mammals that secrete calcitonin.
    • Adrenal glands - Retrocoelomic, cranial to kidneys
      • Catecholamines, glucocorticoids, mineralicorticoids
      • Increased corticosterone documented under physical or physiological stress.
    • Pituitary gland - Below optic chiasma in sella tursica of sphenoid bone.
    • Pancreas typical endocrine functions – insulin/glucagon.
46
Q

How well do chelonians smell?

How well do they hear?

What colors do chelonians see well?

Do chelonians have nasolacrimal ducts?

How has the nasolacrimal gland evolved in sea turtles and diamondback terrapins?

A
  • Special senses and salt glands.
    • Lack parietal eye.
    • Pineal gland may affect behavior, gonadal activity, thermoregulation.
    • Smell - Large olfactory bulbs, modified jacobson’s organ.
    • Excellent hearing - Low tones from 100-700 Hz.
      • Large middle and inner ear beneath tympanic membrane.
      • Sound reception: tympanic membrane -> extracolumella cartilaginous footplate -> osseous columella -> inner ear.
      • Eustacian tube between inner ear and pharynx.
    • Sight.
      • FW turtles far-sighted.
      • Cones predominant photoreceptors.
      • Color vision good for red, yellow, orange.
      • Retina avascular, conus papillaris is a vascular projection from optic nerve.
      • Upper and lower eyelids, nictitating membrane, scleral ossicles.
      • Iris composed of skeletal muscle.
        • PLRs difficult to observe.
      • IOP measured in several spp.
      • Harderian glands and lacrimal glands produce tear film.
        • Glands may obstruct, become cystic with hypovitaminosis A.
        • Herbivorous chelonians can synthesize vitamin A endogenously.
        • No nasolacrimal ducts, so tears spill over lid margins.
        • Tears also lost by conjunctival tissue absorption and evaporation.
      • Sea turtles and diamondback terrapins – lacrimal gland has evolved into salt-excreting gland.
        • Regulate plasma electrolytes in hypertonic environment.
        • Plasma osmolality and Na, Cl, K, Mg can be influenced by salt gland function.
47
Q

Describe the unique physiology of chelonians.

How do they regulate their body temperature?

How are they so tolerant of hypoxia?

A
  • Special physiology (F8):
    • All chelonians considered ectothermic except leatherback sea turtle.
      • Leatherback can regulate body temperature through series of vascular plexuses deep within musculature of limbs.
    • Chelonians may demonstrate episodic breathing and may shunt blood to or away from the lungs via vascular and IC shunting mechanisms.
    • High tolerance of hypoxia, large lung volume, rapid and extensive air exchange during ventilation, and physiologic buffering by bone, blood and pericardial fluid of lactic acid and hydrogen ions built up during anaerobic metabolism.
    • Gas exchange may also occur through the integument, pharynx, or cloacal tissues in some spp.
      • Soft-shelled turtles may obtain 70%+ of oxygen during submergence through leathery shell.
48
Q

Describe the proper husbandry of chelonians.

Do they require UV light?

How do temperatures affect them? What taxa is the most freeze tolerant?

What species hibernate? What is the main source of energy during hibernation? When should managed animals be allowed to hibernate? Should animals be fasted?

WHat are some general rules of nutrition? What do the various taxa eat?

A

Ch 23. Tortoises, Freshwater Turtles, and Terrapins (Mader 2019)

Lighting:

  • Chelonians require UV light – natural is best
    • Tropical species – 12 hr light cycle year round
    • No light at night
    • Temperate species – annual photoperiod should be followed

Temperature:

  • Heliotherms – obtain heat by basking
  • Nonlethal temp range (all chelonians) - 8°C (46°F) to 45°C (113°F)
  • Terrestrial species optimal temp - 28°C (84°F) w/ range: 22° to 30°C (72°–86°F)
    • <15°C (59°F) - inactive and anorexic
    • <10°C (50°F) – hibernating
    • >35°C (95°F) – seek cooler areas, may aestivate
    • 39° to 43°C (102°–109°F) – critical or lethal
    • >45°C (113°F) – rapidly lethal, all species
  • Box turtles – largest freeze tolerant taxa
    • Sudden freezes still major cause of mass mortality box turtles
  • Drop in temp at night – beneficial, may help lessen pyramidal shell growth
  • Captivity - temp gradient within the POTZ is best
  • Drop in temp at night preserves natural circadian rhythms
  • In general:
    • Captive animals should not be subjected to constant temps but should be provided with a diurnal fluctuation and a thermal gradient.
    • Aquatic spp – maintaining appropriate water temp ranges critical.

Hibernation/Brumation:

  • Brumation - precedes reproduction, utilizes stored glycogen and fat, can be important husbandry component
  • Colder temp – thyroid hormones decreases, often anorexic
  • All temperate chelonians should hibernate if healthy, do not hibernate if unhealthy
  • Species hibernation:
    • most Gopherus and Testudo tortoises hibernate, with the exception of African Testudo tortoises
    • none of the tropical tortoises hibernate
    • most temperate zone terrestrial and freshwater turtles hibernate
    • all hibernate north American box turtles hibernate except for the Gulf Coast and Florida box turtles
    • wood turtles, spotted turtles, common snapping turtles, northernly distributed eastern mud turtles, stinkpots, red-eared sliders, and painted turtles should hibernate
  • Falling temps stimulate hibernation, decreased appetite, slowed metabolism
  • Hibernaculi - areas that are slightly warmer than surrounding environment to avoid freezing and provide moisture to protect against dessication
  • Glycogen and fat stores in the liver and body – main source of energy during hibernation
  • Emergence from hibernation stimulated by increasing temperature
  • Jackson’s ratio - compares body weight with midline, straight carapace length
    • partial estimation of healthy body condition for Testudo graeca and T. hermanni (not applicable to other Testudo)
      • presence of uroliths, coelomic exudates, or intestinal gravel can elevate body weight of ill tortoises
  • Maximum carapace length, width, and height (volume) against weight - another estimation of the health status of desert tortoises
  • Prior to hibernation, discontinue supplemental food
  • Indoor humidity can be low during hibernation – recommend soaking intermittently
  • Disturbing during hibernation not harmful
  • Box turtles and Testudo tortoises can tolerate much colder hibernation temperatures
    • Avoid freezing – can cause blindness, damage to extremities, and death
  • Postemergence turtles often dehydrated, immunocompromised, vulnerable to disease
    • Tortoises – should lose no more than 6-7% BW over hibernation
      • Ideally Testudo spp lose <1% BW
  • Aquatic turtles can hibernate under water or on land

General Nutrition

  • Tortoises – Herbivores, graze on grasses and annual forbs, very little natural exposure to fruits.
  • FW turtles – Primarily omnivorous, consume fish, crustaceans, snails, aquatic grasses, fruits, other items.
  • Green sea turtles – Sea grass, algae.
  • Loggerhead and Ridleys – Diet of molluscs and crustaceans.
  • Hawksbills – Specialized diet of sponges.
  • Leatherback – Primarily jellyfish.
  • Captive sea turtles will eat fish, crustaceans, and mollusks and may be acclimated to balanced diets in pellet or gelatin form.
  • Hatchling chelonians of all spp should be fed daily.
  • Most spp should be fed at least twice a week as adults.
49
Q

Describe the analgesics used in chelonians.

What opioids are preferred?

What NSAIDs are used?

Describe the use of local anesthetics to perform phallectomy?

A

Analgesia

  • Opioids
    • Morphine has been shown to provide analgesia, butorphanol did not have any effect on thermal threshold
    • Meperidine at 20 mg/kg – equivalent analgesia to morphine
    • Buprenorphine (0.075-0.1 mg/kg) maintains concentrations considered analgesic in humans
    • Tramadol has also increased the thermal threshold
  • NSAIDS have not shown pharmaodynamic evidence of analgesia but are commonly used
    • Meloxicam pharmacokinetics vary widely
  • Local Anesthetics
    • Prevent transmission of nerve impulses by interrupting sodium influx into the neurons
    • Bupivacaine is more potent and longer acting than lidocaine
    • Lidocaine injected intrathecally at 1mL(20 mg)/25 kg Galapagos tortoises was sufficient to perform phallectomy
50
Q

Describe the anesthesia of chelonians.

What drugs are commonly used?

What drug is preferred for short procedures?

How can recovery be shortened?

A

Anesthesia

  • Pectoral muscles are preferred site for injections
  • Dorsal coccygeal vein is a reliable IV site for dangerous unsedated turtles
  • Death has been associated with subcarapacial injections that were accidentally intrathecal
  • Propofol – 4-8 mg/kg as a single agent
  • Ketamine + alpha 2s
  • Alfaxalone
  • Softshell turtles can absorb MS-222 through their skin
  • Tidal volumes vary – sea turtles have much higher tidal volumes than terrestrial tortoises

Specific Drug Info

  • Alpha 2 Agonists
    • Cardiopulmonary effects similar to mammals
    • Bradycardia & hypoxemia described
    • IV administration of antagonists can produce severe hypotension
  • Ketamine
    • 30-50 mg/kg required to reach anesthesia alone, has long recovery
    • Benzodiazepine & alpha-2s enhance muscle relaxation and reduce doses
  • Propofol
    • Large species appear to require smaller doses than small chelonians
    • Fast induction and recovery time make it a preferred drug for short procedures
  • Neuromuscular Blocking Agents
    • Rocuronium – allowed for endotracheal intubation in box turtles and amazon turtles
    • Can be antagonized with neostigmine & glycopyrrolate (to reduce neostigmines parasympathetic effects)

Recovery

  • Catechomalines modulate cardiac shunting and may shorten recovery
51
Q

Describe the hematology of chelonians.

What do the various cells look like?

What is the size of chelonian red cells?

A

Hematology

● PCV and most other hematologic/biochemical parameters vary sig. by spp., sex, age, nutrition, reproductive status, hibernation, season

● All circulating blood cells retain their nuclei

● Chelonian RBCs large compared to other vertebrates (except amphibians)

o Length approx. same as heterophils

o May contain basophilic cytoplasmic inclusions, thought to be degenerating organelles or hemoglobin ppts (no pathologic sig.)

● Assessing 1º hemostasis challenging - thrombocytes tend to clump and appear similar to lymphocytes

● Thrombocytes - small amounts of cytoplasm, round to ovoid nuclei

o Activated cytoplasm - vacuolated, +/- magenta granules

● Heterophils - largest WBC w/ numerous linear, pink-orange, refractile granules that “melt” together

o Toxic Δ - increased cytoplasmic basophilia, retention of 1º granules - severe inflamm/infection

● Mature lymphocytes - thin rim of basophilic cytoplasm and round nuclei

● Monocytes - round to amoeboid, blue-gray cytoplasm, ovoid to reniform nuclei w/ loosely clumped to coarsely granular chromatin

o Monocytosis - acute & chronic infections

● Eosinophils - round to ovoid, eccentric nuclei, round, pink-orange granules

● Basophils - smallest granulocyte, fine purple/deeply basophilic granules

52
Q

Describe chelonian biochemistry interpretation.

How do Ca and P indicate renal function status?

ALT is found in which tissues? What about AST? What about ALP?

What is the most reliable hepatic indicator in chelonians?

A

Clinical Chemistry

● Ca and P important indicators of renal function in reptiles

● ↓ in Ca:P can indicate renal dysfunction

● ↑ in solubility index (Ca-P product) ↑ risk of dystrophic mineralization

o Females - typically ↑ Ca, iCa, solubility indices, ↓ Ca:P

● ALT, AST, and ALP - wide tissue distribution, spp. dependent organ conc.

● ALT - kidney, liver, cardiac; not useful for renal, normally released in urine

● AST - ↑ w/ hepatic injury but cardiac/skeletal mm. damage also ↑

o Sig. ↑ in male (vs female) desert tortoises

● ALP - kidney, intestine, bones, lungs, repro tract - limited ability as useful hepatic indicator

o ↑ may reflect bone remodeling more reliably than hepatic enzyme induction

● GLDH - holds promise as indicator of hepatocellular necrosis

o Localized to mitochondrial matrix, involved in urea production and amino acid metabolism

o Though present in CNS & kidney, damage leads to excretion in CSF/urine

o Therefore, ↑ in plasma GLDH relatively liver specific

● Biliverdin - main hemoglobin breakdown product

o Green-tinged plasma may indicate liver dz, no commercial assay available

● CK - predominates in skeletal/cardiac mm. w/ smaller amounts in CNS and GI tract

● GLU – varies w/ season, age; hyper- d/t stress or hypo- d/t prolonged anorexia, severe liver dz, septicemia

● ALB – hypo- 2º to renal or intestinal losses, as a neg. acute phase protein, or d/t ↓ protein intake

o Adult nesting seat turtles - ↑ TP, Alb, Glob compared to juv. of same spp.

o Desert tortoises - dehydration has minimal effect of TP, Alb conc.

● TRIG/CHOL - vary widely, esp. in reproductively active females

53
Q

Describe the metabolic bone diseases of chelonians.

what are teh typical clincial signs?

What are some common secondary signs?

What are classic histologic lesions?

A

● Metabolic bone disease (MBD) - nutritional or renal in origin

o Nutritional MBD more common; almost exclusively in captivity

▪ D/t diets deficient in Ca or Vit D, imbalances in Ca:P, lower ambient temps, inadequate UV light thought to play a role

▪ Common in aquatic turtles housed indoors; w/o UV, can’t synthesize calcitriol (active form of D3) necessary for intestinal Ca absorption

Hypocalcemia 🡪PTH 🡪 enhanced bone Ca resorption 🡪 osteopenia (rickets - young animals; osteomalacia - older animals)

▪ Serum Ca low normal, P can be normal to slightly low d/t ↑ renal excretion

o Renal MBD - sequela to 1º chronic renal dz

Decreased GFR 🡪 hyperphosphatemia (hallmark of RMBD) 🡪 hypocalcemia 🡪 soft tissue mineralization & osteodystrophy

o Overlap in appearance of lesions of osteoporosis, osteomalacia, rickets, and fibrous osteodystrophy (not commonly reported in chelonians like in other reptiles)

o Clinical signs 🡪 generalized mm. weakness, cloacal/rectal prolapse, tremors, ataxia, repro. stasis, growth retardation, pathologic fx (uncommon in chelonians), softening of shell, pyramiding, separation of scutes, thickening of rhamphotheca, bowing of the limbs

o Aquatic/semi-aquatic - often erosive shell lesions w/ 2º infections

o Histo – main (but not pathognomonic) 🡪 osteoclastic bone resorption & ineffective mineralization of osteoid

54
Q

Describe secodary nutritional hypothyroidism in chelonians.

What plants is it associated with?

What species are more commonly affected?

What are the lesions?

A

Secondary nutritional hypothyroidism (& subsequent goiter)

o In captive animals

o Assoc. w/ diets ↓ in iodine or ↑ in goitrogenic plants (kale, broccoli, cabbage)

o Iodine toxicity can also lead to goiter

o Galapagos, Aldabra tortoises more susceptible

o Exact pathogenesis unclear, but common in sea turtles in artificial salt water aquaria for prolonged periods

o Grossly - gland enlarged, follicles engorged

o Selenium def. in other spp., not described in chelonians

55
Q

Describe crystal deposition in chelonians.

What results in the precipitation of urate crystals?

What are the typical lesions of gout?

What is needed to appreciate the crystals on cytology?

What is pseudogout?

What groups of chelonians are prone to renal oxalosis?

What is the most common urolith? What chelonians are commonly affected? What lesions occur with uroliths?

A

Gout - frequent in captive terrestrial chelonians

o Hyperuricemia - most common cause

▪ Assoc. w/ renal dz, dehydration, inappropriate diet, reduced renal perfusion

o Uric acid circulates in blood as insoluble monosodium urate, excreted directly by renal tubules

o Hyperuricemia 🡪 precipitation of urates and salts as insoluble crystals

▪ Common in kidneys and joints, can also be visceral surfaces

o Grossly - kidneys swollen/mottled w/ disseminated pinpoint to linear, white, chalky deposits, soft tissues around joints/joint spaces swollen - can hinder mobility

o Renal tubular damage via mechanical and occlusion of tubules

o Tophi form when crystals bind w/ cellular/inflamm, & organic debris, form stellate aggregates

o Urate crystals dissolve readily in alcohol; unfixed, unstained cytology 🡪 polarized crystals

Pseudogout

o Crystal deposition than urate salts (Ca hydroxyapatite in Red-bellied turtles) - typically in joints

Renal oxalosis

o Scattered granulomatous inflamm. assoc. w/ oxalate crystals

o Not uncommon in some herbivorous marine and terrestrial turtles

Uroliths

o Relatively common in terrestrial chelonians, esp. desert tortoises

o Majority in captive, but reported in free-ranging as well

o Uric acid is most common component, usually complexed w/ Ca, K, and ammonium salts

o Radiodense - Rads or CT

o Dehydration most common predisposing factor; others - vit A, D or Ca deficiency, excess dietary protein or oxolates, bacterial infection, complication related to FBs

o Most common in urinary bladder - single, smooth lamellated concretion, but can have multiple

o Can be in ureters, cloaca - not reported in reptile kidneys

o Serum UA not typically elevated unless concurrent renal disease, does not correlate w/ uroliths

o Small stones - mucosal irritation, mild hematuria

o Large stones - mucosal erosion/ulceration, thickening/hypertrophy of wall, transmural inflamm., necrosis, coelomic/visceral adhesions

o Retropulsed eggs occasionally trapped in urinary bladder

56
Q

What is a sequalae of obesity in managed chelonians?

What are the lesions associated with prolonged anorexia?

A

Obesity

o Common in captivity - excessive calories, poorly balanced diet, sedentary lifestyle

o Can predispose to fatty liver syndrome in face of starvation

o Interpret w/ caution - fat content of liver can vary dramatically w/ metabolic state (hibernation, reproductive season)

o Obese turtles may have reduced mobility d/t excessive SQ fat around neck, limbs

Anorexia, prolonged - severe protein malnutrition/cachexia

o Signs - loss of mm. mass, weakness, lethargy, reduced SQ fat, loss of coelomic fat bodies

o Gallbladder ectasia w/ normal bile consistency may indicate recent anorexia; distended gallbladder w/ thick, mucoid, inspissated bile can be assoc. w/ prolonged anorexia

57
Q

What are some common sequelae to cold stunning in sea turtles?

What is the typical appearance of hepatic lipidosis in chelonians?

Chronic liver disease produces what lesions?

A

Metabolic

Hypothermic (cold) stunning

o Free-ranging; abrupt drops in water temps

o Juv. - cool down faster 🡪 smaller bodies, higher surface:volume

o Reduced activity, prone to predation: GI and resp. Dz common

o Sequelae 🡪 fungal/bacterial pneumonia, ulcerative enteritis/gastritis, parasites, related to immune system dysfunction 2º to debilitation

Hepatic lipidosis

o Physiologic (hibernation, reproduction, etc.) or pathologic

o Cytoplasmic accumulation of triglycerides w/in hepatocytes

o Grossly - enlarged w/ rounded edges, light brown to pale tan

o Early stages of pathologic HL - anorexia, protein malnutrition, hepatic injury, systemic disease; grossly indistinguishable

o Liver may float in fixative, water

● Disseminated hepatic fibrosis and hepatocellular nodular hyperplasia cirrhosis)

o Can be 2º to several chronic disease processes

▪ Hepatic inflamm. or severe lipidosis, heart failure, hepatic/post-hep. biliary obstruction

o Grossly - SQ edema/ascites, small liver w/ pale yellow/tan hyperplastic nodules surrounded and separated by thick fibrous connective tissue septae, often w/ pigmented macrophages

58
Q

What chelonian species is commonly affected with aural abscesses?

What is the etiology behind these lesions?

A

Aural abscesses

o Common w/ suboptimal conditions; uni- or bilateral, well documented in E. box turtles

o Etiology multifactorial - improper housing/unsanitary conditions, poor nutrition

o Usually mixed Gram-neg., aerobic bacteria that are part of normal flora of the oral cavity & gain access to tympanic cavity via the Eustachian tube

o Squamous metaplasia assoc. w/ chronic hypovitaminosis A

▪ Not essential for development of aural abscesses, but predisposes to accumulation of keratinized debris and facilitates bacterial colonization

▪ Hypovit A also assoc. w/ metaplasia of lacrimal & Harderian gland ducts 🡪 can lead to development of cysts in 3rd eyelid, interference w/ closing of eyelids

59
Q

Describe the testudinid herpesviruses.

Which virus affects which taxa?

What are the typical clinical signs?

How is this diagnosed? What are some important differentials to consider?

What treatments are available?

What is the prognosis?

How is this disease prevented?

A

Viruses

Herpesviruses

o All reptile herpesviruses belong to subfamily alphaherpesviridae

o 1st herpesvirus isolated in terrestrial chelonians named tortoise herpesvirus 1 (THV-1), has since been ID’d in other spp. of chelonians

▪ Causes necrotizing stomatitis, glossitis, diphtheritic plaques in oral cavity, Cr. esophagus, & trachea (some coinfected w/ Mycoplasma)

▪ Rhinitis, hepatomegaly, enteritis, conjunctivitis also reported

Eosinophilic to amphophilic glassy intranuclear inclusions in mucosal epithelium of oral cavity, tongue, GI tract, resp tract, urinary/genital tract; only during acute phase

o THV-2 - isolated from a CA desert tortoise

▪ Similar clinical and pathologic findings as THV-1

Endotheliotropism 🡪 vasculitis, edema, thrombosis in several cases (unlike THV-1)

Ch. 169 Testudinid Herpesvirus (Mader 2019)

  • Definition:
    • Herpesviridae; Alphaherpesvirinae.
      • Testudinid herpesviruses (TeHVs):
        • TeHV3 – Widespread, most pathogenic, any tortoise.
          • Group B assoc with worse lesions vs group A.
        • TeHV 1 – Russian tortoises.
        • TeHV2 – Agassiz’s desert tortoises.
        • TeHV4 – African tortoises, Leopard tortoises.
      • Transmission y contact +/- vertical. IN and IM inoculation causes dz.
  • Clinical presentation:
    • Stomatitis, glossitis, oral/nasal discharge, ocular discharge, conjunctivitis, dyspnea, neuro signs, cervical edema, anorexia, wt loss.
    • Oral diphtheronecrotic plaques are classic.
    • TeHV3 is neurotropic, but inclusions present systemically.
    • Virus reactivation unpredictable, shedding common after hibernation.
  • Diagnostic confirmation:
    • Ddx – Ranavirus, virus X (picornavirus), Mycoplasma.
    • Serology – SN and ELISA.
      • ELISA validated in Greek and Hermann’s tortoises for TeHV3.
      • Minimum 2 ELISAs at least 8 wks apart for definitive TeHV3 infection, and 10 wks apart for SN. Both equally reliable.
      • Helpful in chronic infection without clinical disease.
    • PCR.
      • Specific and pan-herpesvirus protocols.
      • Test of choice during acute infection.
    • VI, EM, Histo.
      • VI definitive proof.
  • Tx:
    • Acyclovir, ganciclovir reduce viral replication in vitro.
      • Effective concentrations could not be reached in vivo.
      • Supportive care – fluid therapy, tx secondary infections.
      • Vx has been unsuccessful.
  • Prognosis and prevention:
    • Lifelong infection.
    • Quarantine 6+ mos, repeated serology and PCR.
    • Separate animals with clinical signs.
    • Avoid overcrowding and mixing spp.
60
Q

Describe fibropapillomatosis in sea turtles.

What is the etiologic agent?

What species and demographics are most commonly affected?

What are the typical clinical signs?

What are the histologic lesions?

A
  • Fibropapillomatosis (FP)
    • Emerging, panzootic infectious dz affecting green sea turtles, documented in all sea turtle spp.; recognized in 1938; pathogenesis and epidemiology not yet elucidated
    • Putative agent currently - chelonian herpesvirus 5 (ChHV-5), previously chelonid fibropapilloma-assoc. herpesvirus
    • Alphaherpesvirus, genus scutavirus; at least 4 genetic variants
    • Has been identified in non-affected animals (suggests not strict viral cause)
    • Common in post-benthic juv. migrating to coastal shallow feeding areas
    • Both genders; suggests horizontal transmission (aggression, mating)
    • Has not been identified in deep ocean-dwelling turtles
      • Stressors, new environments, social dynamics may play a role
      • Water temp, anthropogenic activity, algal blooms implicated
    • Spontaneous regression noted in some location
    • External tumors in natural & experimentally induced - identical, pathognomonic
    • Tumors - vary, flat, plaque-like lesions to raised exophytic gray to black, verrucous masses over 30 cm in diameter
      • Arise from skin around eyes, mouth, limbs; also on cornea, surface of shell
    • Localized fibroblast proliferation w/in superficial dermis 🡪 hyperplastic epidermis 🡪 exophytic nodules composed of papilliferous fronds
    • Histo – acanthosis, basal cell necrosis, cleft formation along dermo-epidermal jxn
    • Eosinophilic intranuclear inclusions are rare/transient
    • Internal, well-demarcated, smooth tumors (firm, white, nodular) described in oral cavity, glottis, lungs, kidney, heart, liver, spleen, GI tract; tend to develop late in dz process
    • Foreign body granulomas assoc. w/ sprirochiid trematode ova or epidermal inclusion cysts not uncommon in FP lesions of free-ranging turtles
    • Ulcerated regions often assoc. w/ bacterial or fungal colonization
61
Q

What adenovirus affects chelonians?

What species is affected?

What are the typical signs?

What are the lesions?

A
  • Adenoviruses - until recently unrecognized in chelonians
    • Sulawesi tortoise adenovirus-1 (STAdv-1)
      • Mortality event in 105 confiscated Sulawesi tortoises 2006
      • Only reptilian adenovirus w/in Siadenovirus genus
      • Interspecies transmission is likely possible
      • Clinical signs - poor BCS, anorexia, lethargy, ulcerative stomatitis, nasal/ocular discharge, diarrhea
      • Intranuclear, glassy, amphophilic to basophilic inclusions that displace nuclear chromatin
      • Inclusions in many sites - epithelial, hepatocytes, Kupffer cells, cardiac & vascular endothelium, bone marrow myeloid and stromal cells, spleen, pancreas, testes, ovaries, kidneys, resp. epithelium, cerebral glia, choroid plexus
      • Adenovirus-related dz most common in young & immunocompromised animals, or naïve
    • Novel adenovirus from n=1 ornate box turtle in Europe - similar gross/histo findings to STAdv-1
    • Pet trade may be at higher risk d/t mixing of geographic species, inappropriate husbandry and nutrition, other stressors
62
Q

Describe the papillomaviruses of sea turtles.

What are the typical lesions?

How do these differ from the lesions of fibropapillomatosis?

A

Papillomaviruses

o Caretta caretta papillomavirus (CcPV) – ID’d in a free-ranging loggerhead

o Chelonia mydas papillomavirus (CmPV) – ID’d in in free-ranging green sea turtles

▪ Both developed few to many soft, white raised smooth nodules over head and flippers

▪ Histo – eosinophilic intranuclear inclusions surrounded by clear halo

63
Q

What iridoviruses affect chelonians?

How do we think this virus is transmitted?

What are the typical lesions?

What are the inclusion bodies?

A
  • Iridoviridae – diverse group of viruses that infect vertebrates and invertebrates
    • Contains Iridovirus and Ranavirus genus (all OIE reportable); implicated in cause of disease and mortality in chelonian populations worldwide
      • Mediterranean and gopher tortoises, Eastern box turtles (EBT), red-eared sliders
    • Turtle virus -3 (TV-3) (nearly identical to Frog virus-3 (FV-3)) - recovered from EBT
    • Enviro. temps may have sig. effect on virus-assoc. morbidity/mortality
    • Transmission unknown, but because iridoviral particles can be observed in circulating WBCs; may be by blood-feeding parasites or biting insects
      • Other possible transmission modes - consumption of infected animals, enviro. contamination, fomites, amphibian/fish reservoirs
    • Lesions (vary some by spp.) 🡪 oral plaques/ulcers, necrotizing glossitis/tracheitis, pneumonia, multifocal gray foci, hemorrhage in liver, hepatic lipidosis, splenomegaly
      • Necrotizing splenitis w/ hemorrhage - consistent in red-eared sliders
      • raised, often ulcerated abscesses in EBT skin fairly common
      • Fibrinoid vasculitis - consistent finding
    • Intracytoplasmic basophilic inclusions in epithelial cells (renal, hepatic), although uncommon and difficult to ID
64
Q

What bacteria are most commonly isolated in turtles with septicemic cutaneous ulcerative disease?

What are the risk factors for developing lesions?

What are the typical lesions?

A

● Ulcerative lesions of skin and shell, 2º infection w bacteria primarily in captive FW chelonians

o Often assoc. w/ suboptimal housing, nutrition, management

o Often start as abrasions or result of conspecific aggression

o If becomes systemic - SCUD (septicemic cutaneous ulcerative disease)

▪ Signs - Lethargy, weakness, limb paralysis, cutaneous abscesses, necrosis of digits or shell

▪ Reported in N. American, Europe; identical presentation in African terrapins

Citrobacter freundii most common; also Serratia sp. & Beneckea sp.

▪ Grossly - cutaneous erosions/ulcers, loosening of scutes; w/ disseminated 🡪 necrotic foci in liver, spleen, kidney, heart, caseous yellow mass in coelomic cavity

▪ Histo - Intense heterophilic and histiocytic inflammation w/ necrosis

o Recent ID of fungi consistent w/ Nannizziopsiaceae in some lesions complicates pathogenesis; not all should be attributed to bacterial infection

65
Q

What mycoplasma species affect which tortoise species?

What type of infections typiclaly occur?

How is it transmitted?

What are the usual clinical signs?

A

Upper respiratory tract disease (URTD) – rhinitis and oculonasal discharge

o 1st described free-ranging CA desert tortoises, assoc. w/ sig. declines in free-ranging pop

o 5 spp. of Mycoplasma have been ID’d in tortoises

Mycoplasma agassizii (desert torts) & M. testudineum (gopher torts) assoc. w/ URTD

o Mycoplasmas thought to be commensal, opportunistic pathogens

▪ Interplay of factors - strain virulence, # of organisms, external stressors, immunocompetency, coinfections

o Acute high morality rare but reported in exp. study w/ gopher tort hatchlings

o Spontaneous clearance is rare; usually chronic, cyclic infections

o Transmission - likely horizontal, close proximity; latent infections reported

o Clinical signs - palpebral edema, conjunctivitis, rhinitis, oculonasal discharge

▪ Erosions/vertical grooves ventral to the nares in chronic cases

▪ Often cachectic, lethargic w/ systemic disease (2º infections) when die

▪ Nasal cavity lesions can vary dramatically b/w individuals

o Cytoadherence of Mycoplasmas (at least M. pneumonia) to resp. epithelium is by an attachment structure coated w/ adhesins; once adhered accessory proteins allow intracellular translocation

66
Q

Describe salmonella in chelonians.

What is the most common serovar isolated?

How does salmonella affect turtles?

How is it transmitted?

A

Salmonella - recognized as most important zoonotic dz of reptile origin

o Turtle-assoc. human salmonellosis 1st rep. 1943 🡪 legislation on aquatic turtle sale in pet trade

o Routinely isolated from clinically asymptomatic turtles, generally considered normal GI microbes

o Up to 85% may be infected by up to 5 diff. serotypes

o S. durham may be most common isolate (one institution)

o Intermittent shedding reported in healthy hosts

o Debilitated animals can develop pathogenic infections - clinical disease in chelonians far less common than other reptiles

o Transmission - fecal-oral, urine, vertical documented (eggs pass through cloaca)

o Virulence factors vary greatly b/w Salmonella spp. and serovars

67
Q

Describe mycobacteriosis in chelonians.

What types of chelonians are most commonly affected?

What mycobacteria species are most common?

What are the typical presentations?

What are the the typical lesions?

A

Mycobacteria spp.

o Slender, aerobic, acid-fast, and Gram-positive bacilli

o Infections most common in aquatic chelonians

o M. marinum & M. chelonae common; M. kansasii some, few rep. of M. avium - green sea turtles

o More common in free-ranging (can be captive), and can be acute or chronic in nature

▪ Acute – lethargy, limb petechial hemorrhages, bloody nasal d/c, internal hemorrhages

▪ Chronic – more common; granulomatous dz - lungs, coelomic viscera, skin; bones, joints

o Bacterial emboli and disseminated IV coagulopathy reported

o Histo - heterophil aggregates w/ or w/o central liquefied core surrounded by histiocytes, macrophages, multinucleated giant cells

o Typically stain positive w/ acid fast stains such as Ziehl Neelson and Fites method but atypical mycobacteria may not

o Diagnosis - a/f bacteria in exudates, but positive culture and molecular more definitive

68
Q

Describe the fungal infections of chelonians.

What are three important fungal causes of superficial dermatomycoses?

What lesions are commonly seen with microsporidiosis? What species has been affected?

What are the lesions typiclaly associated with emydomyces? What group of fungi does that belong to?

What fungus is a common cause of pneumonia in cold stunned sea turtles?

What about fungal pneumonia in tortoises?

What fungus is widespread in the GI tract? What lesions are present if it is causing pathogenicity?

A

Fungi

  • Largely considered opportunistic, typically under managed care
    • Managed care - suboptimal housing, overcrowding, inappropriate temps, poor hygiene; allow organic debris to build up, promote fungal growth
    • Free-ranging - adverse enviro. conditions
  • Hyalohyphomycoses and phaeohyphomycoses reported in chelonians
  • Superficial dermatomycoses
    • Typically lesions on shell, less commonly on skin
    • More common in marine and fresh water turtles than terrestrial
    • White to lightly colored blemishes on carapace 🡪 scute necrosis, pitting, can ulcerate
    • Fatal infections rare, but outbreaks of Mucor (FL softshell turtles) and Paecilomyces (Fly River turtles) reported
    • In terrestrial - 2º fungal pododermatitis can develop (d/t substrate putatively)
    • Necrotizing scute dz (NSD) – caused by Fusarium incarnatum
      • Isolated from free-ranging and managed Texas tortoises
      • Blemishes on shell confined to superficial epidermal keratin layers
      • Differs from SCUD – lesions do not result in systemic dz/death
  • Microsporidiosis
    • Reported in Hermann’s tortoises w/ granulomatous/necrotizing hepatitis, pneumonia w/ intralesional basophilic spores
    • Stain positive w/ Grocott-Gomori’s methenamine Silver & PAS
  • Phaeohyphomycoses
    • Ochroconis and Exophiala (dematiaceous fungi)
      • Granulomatous to ulcerative skin lesions on feet and tail of box turtles
      • Exophiala - reported oral granuloma (radiated tort), deep ulcerative shell lesions (Aldabra tort), unilateral ocular infection/systemic disease (Galapagos tort)
    • Veronea sp. - obstructive tracheitis in stranded green sea turtles
  • Nannizziopsiaceae
    • Unique presentation of mycotic shell disease
    • Reported in variety of managed and free-ranging aquatic/semi-aquatic chelonians
    • Grossly - multifocal to coalescing scute ulceration, keratin discoloration, deformation, necrotizing osteomyelitis (radiographically nodular lytic lesions)
    • Cystic - central accumulation of tan/gray caseous material, large lesions may compress coelomic viscera
    • Hyphae readily visible w/ GMS stain but may be inapparent w/ routine HE staining
    • Phylogenetic analysis 🡪 distinct from related reptile pathogens (Ophidiomyces, CaNV)
  • Systemic mycoses
    • Respiratory tract is primary route of infection (usually the lungs), dissemination possible
    • Fusarium spp. - assoc. w/ cold-stunning events, causing fungal pneumonias
    • Fungal pneumonia assoc. w/ sporulating fungi (Aspergillus, Paecilomyces, Penicillium spp.) relatively common in giant tortoises
    • Aspergillus spp. fungal pneumonias usually involve lower resp tract
      • Caseous, firm, nodular masses, fungal plaques on mucosal or coelomic surfaces
      • Dissemination to liver, spleen, kidneys, other viscera possible
    • Yeasts, (esp. Candida albicans) - widespread in GI tract; pathologic infections are rare
      • Reports include oronasal ulcers (radiated tortoise), pneumonia (Greek tortoise), enteritis and pneumonia (stranded loggerhead sea turtle)
69
Q

Describe spirorchidiiasis in chelonians.

What is an important intermediate host for these trematodes?

What animals are commonly the most affected?

Where are the adult trematodes found?

What are the gross and histological lesions?

A

Metazoa

  • Spirorchiid trematodes – at least 10 genera documented in sea turtles
    • One of most common/widespread CV parasites in world
    • Thought to play a role in sea turtle stranding and mortality
    • Life cycle unknown; thought to involve a gastropod and a motile cercarial stage
      • Amphiorchis sp. identified as key intermediate host for infection in loggerheads
      • Infection extremely common in free-ranging sea turtles, but trematode burden does not always correlate w/ clinical disease or death, however ↑ tissue ova burden may correlate w/ declining BCS
      • Spirorchiid infections often colocalize anatomically w/ other dz processes, like FP-assoc. skin & internal tumors, coccidian-assoc. enteritis, systemic Gram-neg bacterial inf.
      • Adult trematodes 🡪 cardiac chambers, lumina of great vessels
      • Gross - cardiac and vascular lesions 🡪 endocarditis, arteritis, tunica muscularis thickening, mural mineralization, intimal nodular proliferation, thrombosis, aneurysms
      • Ova - round to elongated (500 um x 100 um) deposited in vascular lumen, wall, or @ perivascular sites (most commonly spleen), often assoc. w/ granulomatous inflammation
70
Q

Describe testudinid intranuclear coccidiosis.

What species have been affected?

What are the clinical signs?

What are the typical gross lesions?

What is teh most common histological lesion?

How is this disease confirmed?

A
  • Intranuclear coccidian
    • Reported in confiscated/pet-trade radiated, giant, flat-tailed, spider, bowsprit, and impressed tortoises, E. box turtles, and Arakan forest turtles
    • Clinical presentation variable 🡪 clear mucoid nasal/ocular discharge, lethargy, weakness, anorexia, anemia, leukocytosis, hypoNa, hyperuricemia, hyperglycemia
    • Life cycle and mode of infection/transmission not been elucidated
    • Generally systemic and widespread infections; concurrent mycoplasmosis, amoebiasis, bacterial septicemia possible
    • Grossly - severity and distribution vary; mucous membrane pallor, rhinitis w/ oronasal fistulas, generalized SQ edema, coelomic effusion, pseudomembranous enteritis, epicardial and intestinal petechiae, tan liver discoloration, splenic congestion, gray pallor to red mottling in kidneys, urinary bladder distension, pulmonary congestion, skin ulceration
    • Intranuclear stages more commonly in renal tubular epi cells, hepatocytes, enterocytes, pancreatic ductular epi, acinar cells, u bladder, ureteral epi, nasal mucosa, tracheal epi, and pneumocytes
    • Most common histo lesion 🡪 single cell necrosis assoc. w/ intranuclear (or less commonly intracytoplasmic) stages of organism
    • Organisms not ID’d in CNS but inflamm. infiltrates in brain/spinal cord of some affected animals
    • Can be difficult to ID on HE stain, do not selectively stain w/ Fite’s acid-fast of PAS methods
    • Cytology of nasal exudate w/ Wright-Giemsa may highlight organisms
    • qPCR on swabs from conjunctiva, oral, choanal, or cloaca for confirmation in suspect cases
71
Q

Describe the GI protozoal parasites of chelonians.

What coccidian parasites commonly affect these species?

Which one was associated with a mass mortality events in sea turtles? What lesions were present in those cases?

What are the typical clinical signs of cryptosporidiosis in chelonians?

How does Entamoeba affect chelonians?

A
  • GI protozoal parasites
    • Eimeria spp. most common in chelonians
    • Eimeria caretta,
    • Caryospora cheloniae - assoc. w/ mortality in mariculture-raised green sea turtles and mass mortality events in green sea turtles in Australia
      • Main lesion - heterophilic to granulomatous meningoencephalitis and fibrinous or fibrinonecrotizing enteritis
      • Meronts packed w/ numerous basophilic merozoites - cytoplasm of intestinal epi cells and w/in WBCs in intestinal mucosa & lamina propria, thyroid, brain; also renal tubular epi.
  • Cryptosporidium spp. - at least 2 novel spp. ID’d in GI tract of tortoises (Testudo)
    • Signs not always obvious 🡪 diarrhea, pica, weight loss, undigested food in feces, anorexia
    • Gastric cryptosporidiosis – stomach dilated and filled w/ fluid, organisms along apical surface of gastric mucosal epithelial cells
    • Intestinal cryptosporidiosis – fibrinonecrotic lesions, ulceration, hemorrhage w/ intracellular, extracytoplasmic organisms assoc. w/ apical border of enterocytes
  • Amoebiasis (usually Entamoeba invadens)
    • Pathogenesis similar to other reptiles
    • Lesions – fibrinonecrotic enteritis/colitis, +/- necrotizing hepatitis via dissemination through portal vasculature or common bile duct
    • Amoeba readily apparent on HE stain
72
Q

Describe the ectoparasites of chelonians.

What makes up the epibiont load of sea turtles? What can taht indicate?

What types of ticks are seen on chelonians?

A

Ectoparasites

  • Epibiont load – # of barnacles, leeches, algae, & other marine life adhered to shell of sea turtles
    • Can be indicator of weakness/disease, esp. if adhered to skin as well as shell
    • Excessive algae suggests consistently floating near the surface
    • Excessive barnacles suggests inability to scrape barnacles off on rocks
    • Interpret w/ caution as epibiont loads vary with species
  • Ixodid and argasid ticks
    • Typically in free-ranging; usually skin of limbs/neck, some spp. localize in seams b/w scutes
    • Anemia w/ severe burdens, can cause skin wounds that become 2º infected
    • No reports of tick-borne disease in chelonians, very rare in reptiles in general
    • Amblyomma ticks are vectors for mammal pathogens such as Ehrlichia ruminatium, the cause of heartwater dz in domestic ruminants in Africa - have been found on leopard tortoises
    • Careful exam and removal of ticks necessary to prevent inadvertent pathogen introduction
73
Q

What differentials should be considered with multiple acute mortalities in a group of chelonians?

A

Acute Mortalities

  • Multiple deaths- infectious, environmental failure, or intoxication.
    • Herpesvirus, intranuculear coccidiosis, adenovirus, entamebiasis, ranavirus, chlamydiosis, reovirus, and paramyxovirus.
    • Indoors or in a green house, overheating lethal - above 38 to 43 C (100-110 F), all spp.
74
Q

Describe your differentials for the following dermatologic conditions in chelonians:

Cutaneous or subcutaneous swelling

Erythema

Aural abscess

Whitish Growth on Skin

Whitish area on shell

Sloughing skin

Sloughing scutes

Shell ulceration

Overgrown rhamphotheca and toenails

Soft or distorted shell

Pyrmaidal shell growth

Edema or ascites

A

Dermatological Signs

  • Cutaneous or SQ swelling
    • Box turtles, torts, or aquatic turts - myiasis caused by Cistudinomyia cistudinis.
      • Maggots encyst SQ, breathe through small black-rimmed pores on base of neck, base of legs, axilla, prefrm fossa, pericloaca.
    • Joints or feet - gout, pseudogout or calc circumscripta, infection, FB, parasites, puncture wounds, fracture, luxations.
    • Aural abscess
    • Tumors- epidural squamous papillomas (aquatic turtles).
    • Bacterial (i.e. mycobacteria) or sub bacterial or fungal granulomas.
    • Fibropapilomas in green sea turtles.
    • Gas bubble disease.
    • Spirochid blood fluke eggs - granulomatous tissue reactions.
      • Can occlude blood vessels and manifest as ulcerative ecchymyotic shell lesions
    • Erythema, petechiae, eccymoses, purpura, foul odor of shell or skin – unsanitary husbandry.
      • Bacterial or fungal shell infections.
      • Focal areas, white to yellow to serosanguinous under scutes – osteomyelitis.
      • Diffuse shell erythema also seen with septicemia, starvation.
  • Erythema
    • Septicemia (endotoxins, exotoxins, hemoprotozoans), bacterial dermatitis, burns, or hypervitaminosis A
    • Juvenile freshwater turtles - reddish aposematic coloration is normal, fades with age.
  • Aural Abscess – Common in Emydid turtles.
  • Whitish Growth on Skin - shed skin piecemeal (normal), scar tissue, fungal, viral, parasitic infection.
  • Whitish areas on shell - healed shell lesions (normal), exposed healed bone missing scutes, mineral deposits, ongoing shell infection – bacterial or fungal.
    • White areas may be seen in annuli between skutes in rapidly growing turtles, normal, darkens with age.
    • Texas tortoises - superficial whitish scute necrosis that spares the new growth annuli, caused by Fusarium semitectum.
  • Sloughing Skin
    • Full thickness is abnormal- hypervit A, bacterial infections i.e. anaerobes, trauma, starvation, chemical or thermal burns.
    • Desert tortoises - too damp during hibernation - ulcerative dermatitis.
      • Aeromonas hydrophila
  • Sloughing Scutes
    • Bacterial or fungal infections - moist environment or from chronic renal failure.
      • RF – Bone plates may loosen and ooze azotemic fluid.
      • Ascites may also be present.
    • Tortoises - nutritional deficiencies may cause flaking and sloughing of scutes, secondary infections.
    • Aquatic species normally flake off portions and shed scutes annually.
  • Shell Ulceration and Necrosis
    • Trauma
    • Terrestrial chelonians – Wet shell necrosis (bacterial), dry shell necrosis (fungal).
    • Ulcerative shell disease or shell necrosis - chronic contagious disease (Beneckea chitonovora - bacterial from shellfish may cause pitting of shell of aquatic turtles).
    • Speticemic cutaneous ulcerative disease (SCUD)- caseated craterform ulcers, ventral surfaces of aquatic turtles.
      • Untreated - hepatic necrosis, paralysis, and death
    • Free-ranging desert tortoises - cutaneous dyskeratosis – lesions commence at seams and spread towards middle of scutes, high mortality.
  • Overgrown Rhamphotheca and Toenails
    • Nutritional disease like NSHP, protein deficiency or excess, lack of wear (less likely).
    • Elongated nails (but not rhampotheca) on front or rear feet (not both) is secondary sex characteristics of some males.
  • Soft Shell or Distorted shell
    • Usually NSHP (rarely fractures, just bends/folds).
    • Normal hatchlings should have firm shells within first few years (solid bone, most spp).
    • NSHP can cause scoliosis of plastron, lordosis, upturned marginal, increased vertical growth esp at bridge, narrowed or increased shell openings, lack of growth.
      • Shell appears too small for the chelonian, often assoc with penile prolapse.
      • Scute abnormalities may be congenital or metabolic bone dz.
  • Pyramidal Shell Growth
    • Juveniles most affected, etiology remains unknown, multifactorial.
    • NSHP, too rapid growth, low humidity, continuous temp maintenance. Not protein excess.
  • Dermal Fistulas – Trauma or myiasis, abscesses.
  • Edema or Ascites
    • Liver (hepatic lipidosis), kidney, cardio-pulm dz, vascular or lymphatic obstruction or hypoproteinemia.
    • Fat chelonias have excessive lipid deposition in axial and prefemoral areas - don’t confuse with edema.
    • Myxedema has been observed in chelonians with thyroid/thymus dysfunction.
75
Q

What differentials should be considered for the following GI conditions in chelonians?

Anorexia

Pale tongue and mucous membranes

Stomatitis

Dried discharge on rhamphotheca

Emesis/Regurgitation

Constipation

Bloating

Diarrhea

Cloacal mass

Cloacal bleeding

A

Gastrointestinal Signs

  • Anorexia – Nonspecific. Winter anorexia common in wild-caught spp that normally hibernate.
  • Pale Tongue and Mucous Membranes
    • Anemia of chronic disease (poor nutrition), pore peripheral circulation, blood loss.
    • Many chelonians normally have lower PCVs than other reptiles or vertebrates.
  • Infectious Stomatitis
    • Herpes – Necrotic caseous oropharyngeal stomatitis, glossitis, pharyngitis, tracheitis.
      • Russian tortoises remain latently infected.
      • All terrestrial chelonians considered susceptible.
    • Ranavirus, mycobacterial infections, infectious stomatitis are otherwise rare.
  • Moisture or Dried Mucus on Rhamphotheca
    • Oral infection i.e. herpes, pneumonia, regurgitation, ulceration, jaw fracture, rhampotheca abnormalities.
  • Constipation
    • Chelonians typically defecate daily to every few days.
    • Constipation most commonly from colonic impaction from FB i.e. sand, gravel, rocks, cage litter, yard debris.
      • Fine sand, crushed gravel particular concern.
      • Few stones may pass uneventfully.
    • Cystic calculi, low environmental temps, parasites less common causes.
  • Emesis/Regurgitation
    • Parasites, FB, septicemia
    • Adverse drug reactions
      • 30 mins post admin of enrofloxacin or Vit A at normal dose
    • Ptyalism, oronasal fluid regurgitation, vomiting common with intestinal/colonic impactions.
    • Toadstools
  • Bloating
    • Fermentation of food in GI tract
    • Diet change to protein-rich or ccarb-rich foods, force-feeding sick chelonians inappropriate foods, excessive volumes to cachexic animals at suboptimal temps.
    • Intestinal/colonic obstruction or hypomotility.
  • Diarrhea
    • Food with high water concents i.e. fruits. Infectious causes.
    • Tortoises – Lack of roughage, often when housed indoors. Semiformed feces may not be abnormal.
  • Mass protruding from cloaca
    • Phallus is most common, should retract within hours.
      • Large pink, purple, tan mass with spade-shaped tip.
    • Ddx prolapse of urinary bladder cloaca, colon, or oviduct.
  • Bleeding from cloaca
    • Phallus laceration is common.
    • Parasites.
    • Urocystoliths - can lodge in proctodeum.
    • Cloacaliths - seen in several tortoise species.
  • Dilated Cloaca - may take several months to reduce, usually from urocystoliths
76
Q

What differentials should be considered for the following respiratory conditions in chelonians?

Nasal discharge

Nasal abnormalities

Dyspnea or abnormal breath sounds?

Abnormal floating

Inability to submerge

A

Respiratory Signs

  • Nasal Discharge
    • Pressure applied on gular area should not elicit any nasal discharge nor should forcing the head posteriorly into the shell.
      • Mycoplasma – most common upper tract disease (usually no mass mortalities).
        • Herpes is the next most common, almost always has whitish oral plaques.
      • All terrestrial chelonians susceptible.
        • White discharge or bubbling from nares, rhinitis, ocular discharge, conjunctivitis, mild palpebral edema, decreased to no appetite, lethargy and weight loss, without lesions in mouth.
        • Nasal dc may accumulate on forelimbs from wiping.
    • Herpesvirus (white plaques in oral cavity), ranavirus, adenovirus, intranuclear coccidiosis, chlamydiosis, reovirus, paramyxovirus, FB, and oronasal fistulas.
      • Multiple deaths common with viruses and TINC.
  • Nasal Abnormalities
    • Chronic discharge - erode or depigment nares.
    • NSHP in growing torts or mycobacteriosis may cause area around nose to bulge asymmetrically (like atrophic rhinitis of swine).
  • Dyspnea and Abnormal breath sounds.
    • Stretch neck and gape or pump head and legs.
    • Gular pumping assoc with olfaction and not a dyspneic sign.
    • Whistling or click - lower tract dz or glottal/tracheal obstruction.
      • Gram negative bacteria most common cause. Other infectious diseases or FB or neoplasia i.e. tracheal chondromas.
  • Uneven Floating
    • Listing of aquatic turtles – Abscesses, tumors, cystouroliths, GBs, asymmetrical gas or bloating, pneumonia.
  • Inability to submerge
    • Common in sea turtles – Emaciation, pneumonia, tumors, GI or coelomic gas (infection, trauma, obstruction).
77
Q

WHat differentials should be considered for a failure to lay eggs in chelonians?

A

Reproductive Signs

  • Failure to Lay Eggs
    • NSHP, hypovit A, hypcalcemia, dehydration, lack of nesting area.
      • Need deep substrate (twice length of carapace).
    • Ruptured, large, or anomalous eggs, oviductal rupture, infection, mass impinging on the oviduct i.e. urolith, fecalith, colonic FB can lead to egg retention.
    • Eggs may become ectopically located in UB, coelom, colon, or lodge in pelvis.
78
Q

What differentials should be considered for the following musculoskeletal conditions in chelonians?

Lameness

Asymmetrical toenail wear

Swollen long bones

A

Musculoskeletal Signs

● Lameness

○ Abscesses, bite wounds, FB, fractures, osteomyelitis, luxation, trauma, gout, pseudogout, sepsis. Females – short-term sequela to egg laying and imbalances in Ca homeostasis.

■ Egg retention, cystic calculi, cloacaliths, constipation may contribute to lameness.

■ N or RSHP.

■ Large breeding males can traumatize limbs when dismounting females.

○ Asymmetrical toenail wear

■ Sign of lameness in terrestrial species, but don’t mistake for secondary sex characteristics.

○ Swollen joints

○ Swollen long bones

■ Fractures, neoplasia, osteomyelitis

■ Fibrous osteodystrophy - common in lizards with NSHP, RARE in chelonians

79
Q

What differentials should be considered for the following neurologic conditions in chelonians?

Ataxia/Hypermetric gate

Circling

Flaccid Paresis, Paralysis, or Coma

A

Neurological Signs

● Ataxia/Hypermetric Gait

○ Tortoises - hyperthermia, near-drowning, or joint luxations

○ Cerebellar injury – hypoxia, cerebral edema, encephalitis.

○ Toxin exposure – Ivermectin, Ops in mite and tick sprays, heavy metals.

● Circling - freezing during hibernation (blindness), toxemia, encephalitis, central nervous system damage, or hepatic encephalopathy.

● Flaccid Paresis, Paralysis or Coma

○ Severe systemic illness – septicemia, organ failure, starvation, death.

○ Toxicity to ivermectin, Rhododendrons, shock, drowning, asphyxiation, hyperthermia, bloat.

○ Check heart beat with doppler.

80
Q

What differentials should be considered for the following ocular conditions in chelonians?

Blindness

Palpebral Edema

Exophthalmia

Enophthalmia

Conjunctivitis and ocular discharge

A

Ocular

● Blindness

○ Testudo spp after freezing, may be assoc with hyphema, vitreal haze, lenticular opacities, retinal damage.

■ May be anorexic, have head tilt, circl, hold head high.

● Palpebral edema

○ Hypovitaminosis A, herpes infections (more keeping eyes shut).

○ Trauma, FB, bacterial or viral infection, parasites, metabolic disturbances.

○ Box turtles may hold one eye shut due to aural abscess secondary to swelling.

○ Ulcers, panophthalmitis, fire ant stings may cause blepharospasm.

● Expopthalmia - Retrobulbar abscess, tumor, or injury.

● Enophthalmia – Microphthalmia (if OU), thiamine deficiency (frozen fish diet). Herpes, circulatory collapse or hypotension in sepsis or debilitated chelonians.

○ Eyes often sink before death.

○ Unilateral – orbital injury i.e. HBC, phthisis bulbi.

● Palpebral Edema

○ Hypovit A

○ Emaciated or dehydrated turts with herpesvirus

● Conjunctivitis and ocular discharge

○ Sea turtles, red foot and yellow foot tortoises have clear ocular discharge b/c they lack lacrimal ducts.

81
Q

Describe the approach to a prefemoral coeliotomy in a chelonian.

What organs can be accessed this way?

How should the tortoise be positioned?

How should the incision be closed?

A

Ch. 99 – Prefemoral Coeliotomy (Mader 2019)

  • Two major approaches to coelom of chelonians: transplastron and prefemoral.
  • Prefemoral approach – Through prefemoral fossa.
    • Less invasive.
    • Can provide unilateral surgical access to caudal lung, liver, small and large intestine, reproductive tract, kidney, and bladder.
    • Positioned in lateral recumbency, head down helpful.
    • Left prefemoral approach often preferred by right-handed surgeons (with a right approach easier for those who are left-handed).
    • Ipsilateral pelvic limb maximally extended and secured caudal.
    • Skin incision cranial to extended limb and in a cranial-to-caudal direction, in middle of prefemoral fossa, starting close to skin insertion at plastrocarapacial (bridge) junction and ending just cranial to musculature of limb.
    • Blunt dissection cranial to sartorius and ventral to iliacus muscles exposes pale coelomic aponeurosis formed by external abdominal oblique muscle
    • Coelomic membrane, musculature, subcutaneous tissues closed with simple continuous pattern using absorbable sutures.
    • Skin closed using nylon or polydioxanone and simple, horizontal mattress sutures
      • Removed (if still present) 8 weeks postop.
82
Q

Describe the transplaston approach to a coeliotomy in chelonians.

When is it indicated?

What are the disadvantages?

What are the important landmarks to be aware of?

How is the incision made?

How is closure accomplished?

Compare the transplastron and the prefemoral approaches.

A

Ch. 100 – Chelonian Transplastron Coeliotomy (Mader 2019)

  • Disadvantages:
    • Increased surgical trauma, pain and discomfort, and prolonged bone healing.
  • Indications:
    • Extensive exposure (for large cystic calculus, foreign body, or mass removal) or exploration required.
    • Patients with small prefemoral fossae.
  • Locations of the heart (usually at midline intersection of pectoral and abdominal scutes), paired abdominal veins (running caudocranially within ventral abdominal musculature), hinges (between abdominal and femoral scutes in Testudo, and between pectoral and abdominal scutes in Terrapene), and plastron thickness (including its expansion toward plastrocarapacial bridge) have to be considered before surgery.
  • Access cannot be easily enlarged - ensure initial cuts are sufficient.
  • Plastron incision:
    • In neonates and young juveniles - scalpel blade can be used.
    • Oscillating sagittal saw couples accuracy with reduced collateral damage and minimal soft-tissue trauma needed in most cases.
    • Thinner incisions can often be obtained using a fine blade rotary saw but rotating saws are less forgiving on soft tissues, and over-scoring at corners occurs with larger-blade diameters.
    • Saw held at 45 to 60 degrees to bevel lateral shell incisions - made first.
    • Fine hypodermic needle or scalpel blade can be used to gauge depth.
    • Caudal cut and final cranial cut made in a similar fashion, but bevelling not necessary.
    • Caudal or cranial cut can be incomplete, with a few millimeters bone thickness left.
    • Soft tissues are bluntly dissected free while elevating cranial and caudal margins, staying as close to the shell as possible.
    • Paired abdominal veins - closely associated with plastron.
    • Soft-tissue attachments at fractured bone line can be left intact, because plastron flap is reflected caudal and covered with moistened, sterile gauze.
    • Entry into coelom options:
      • Midline incision, between abdominal veins, through poorly defined linea alba.
      • Unilateral or bilateral paramedian incision(s) lateral to abdominal veins.
      • Even ligation and transection of one abdominal vein to permit an L-shaped flap for removing large structures.
        • Ligation of both abdominal veins not recommended, because severe circulatory disturbance would likely ensue.
    • Coelomic membrane closed in simple continuous pattern using absorbable suture material.
    • Poliglecaprone 25 or polyglyconate can be used for closure of paramedian incisions, but polydioxanone preferred for linea alba.
    • 3-4 stabilizing sutures (usually polydioxanone, but wire can be used for large species) placed through drilled holes to anchor bony section to plastron.
    • Closure - epoxy resin or acrylic (e.g., polymethylmethacrylate), either at 4 points or around the entire bony incision.
    • Common for plastron flap to become a sequestrum that provides temporary protection for new bone growth beneath.
    • Plastron typically heals within 12 weeks but can take longer, and therefore the covering is usually left in place for 6 to 12 months.
    • Rads seldom helpful in assessing healing - radiolucent lines persist long after healing is complete but, osteolysis may suggest osteomyelitis.
83
Q

What venipuncture sites are recommended in chelonians?

A
  • Venipuncture
    • Sodium or lithium heparin.
    • EDTA causes hemolysis.
    • Sites – Jugular most reliable (minimizing lymph), dorsal coccygeal vein, axillary branch of the brachial vein in forelimb, subcarapacial sinus. Occipital sinus.
      • Sea turtles – external jugular vein/dorsal cervical sinus aka supravertebral.
84
Q

Describe the hematology of chelonians.

How long are red blood cells in circulation?

When do heterophil counts rise?

What do toxic heterophils look like?

When is a lymphopenia or a lymphocytosis seen?

What about a monocytosis?

A
  • Hematology
    • RBCs long life spans i.e. 600-800 days in box turtles.
    • Limitations of blood collection 5-8% of total i.e. 0.5-0.8 mL for 100 g animal.
    • Heparin preferred anticoagulant.
    • Total WBC counts – direct via Natt-Herricks or indirect via phloxin B sol or estimation from smear.
    • Chelonian leukocyte response less predictable vs mammals or birds.
      • Varies by spp, season, nutritional status, type of stain, venipuncture site, handling of sample, age, sex, anticoag used.
      • Twofold changes in a parameter constitute a significant change.
    • Het counts incren ase during summer and decrease during brumation.
    • Toxic hets display cytoplasmic basophilia, abnormal granulation, lobed nuclei, are present in cases of inflammation.
    • Basophilia may be present with parasites or viral dz.
    • Lymph counts low to absent in winter and low in cases of malnutrition and dz secondary to stress and immunosuppression.
    • Lymphocytosis seen with wound healing, parasites, viral infections.
    • Monocytes increase with granulomatous disease.
85
Q

Describe chelonian biochemical analysis.

What side effects may occur with EDTA?

What analytes are similar in plasma compared to serum?

Lymph is lower in what analytes?

Healthy UA is typically less than what?

Hyperkalemia may be indicative of what?

High total protein may be indicative of what?

A
  • Biochemistry
    • EDTA -> changes in K and Ca directly and other parameters due to hemolysis.
    • Biochemical assays routinely run on plasma.
    • Glucose, Ca, P, Na, urea, enzymes in lymph are comparable with those in plasma.
    • Lymph lower in TP and K vs plasma.
    • BUN, Cr poor indicators of renal disease.
      • Low BUN in marine spp may indicate chronic anorexia.
      • Plasma UA in chelonians generally < 5 mg/dL.
        • Elevations may be seen in sepsis, nephrocalcinosis, nephrotoxicity, gout, recent high-protein diet.
    • Hyponatremia may result from GI or renal dz, oversupplementation of fluids low in sodium, dz of salt gland, maintenance of SW spp in FW.
    • Hypernatremia may occur in dehydration or excessive dietary intake.
    • Potassium elevated with hemolysis, reduced renal secretion, reduced intake or excess GI loss.
    • Ca may increase 2-4x with follicular development.
      • Hypocalcemia may be caused by anorexia, dietary deficiencies of calcium or vit D3, hypoalbuminemia, alkalosis, hypoparathyroidism.
    • Phosphorus can decrease with starvation, nutritional deficiency.
    • Hyperphosphatemia from excessive dietary phosphorous, hypervitaminosis D, renal dz, severe tissue trauma or be falsely elevated with hemolysis.
    • AST, LDH high in liver tissue but not specific. CK muscle specific.
    • Increased LDH, AST in absence of high CK indicates liver disease.
    • Low TP seen with chronic malnutrition, PLE, maldigestion, chronic liver and kidney dz.
    • High TP seen during folliculogenesis and dehydration. Increased globulins.
    • Hypoglycemia may be caused by starvation, malnutrition, hepatobiliary dz, septicemia.
      • Hyperglycemia likely iatrogenic.
86
Q

Describe the restraint and positioning of chelonians for radiography.

A

Ch. 56 – Radiography of Chelonians (Mader 2019); Review images from this chapter.

  • Restraint and positioning

o Elevation of chelonian by placement of plastron on an appropriately narrow lucent structure (central plastron stand) encourages head and limb extension.

o Chemical restraint helpful for evaluation of head or limbs (depending on patient) – tape can also be used for limb arrangement.

o Position as close to cassette as possible.

o Shell curvature – structures further away from cassette will be magnified or blurred – right and left laterals recommended for larger chelonians.

o Orthogonal views: Dorsoventral, horizontal beam lateral(s), cranial caudal images.

o Technique adjustments for shell may be needed – increase mAs.

87
Q

Describe the radiographic evaluation of the cardiovascular and respiratory systems in chelonians.

Where is the heart loacted?

How do various pulmonary diseases appear (focal, multifocal, diffuse)?

A
  • Cardiovascular system
    • Radiography not commonly used to assess for heart disease – heart poorly visualized with indistinct borders -> echocardiography.
    • Heart located as soft-tissue opaque structure ventral to the tracheal termination.
    • Loggerhead – triangle formed by scapula and coracoids is landmark.

Respiratory system

  • Lung is arborized – small airways terminating in spongy (edicular) air spaces; dorsal lung adheres to carapace parietal serosa, interspersed muscular fibrous bands.
  • Pulmonary vasculature should be visible.
  • Limb and head extension are important for lung expansion.
  • PPV – less risk of misinterpreting overinflation compared to snakes and lizards.
  • Diseases – increased pulmonary soft tissue opacity- focal, multifocal or diffuse.
    • Fibrosis is differential for diffuse or multifocal pattern.
    • Focal – focal pneumonia, granuloma, abscess, neoplasia.
  • Cold-stunned Kemp’s ridleys distribution and pattern of pulmonary infiltrates have not been reported with disease/condition specificity (honeycomb pattern).
  • CT optimal
88
Q

Describe the radiographic evaluation of the chelonian GI tract.

How do transit times differ between barium or iodinated contrast?

A
  • Gastrointestinal
    • Temperature, nutrition, time since last meal must be considered.
    • DV and HBL, best visualized on DV.
    • Stomach in left mid portion, minimal gas should be present (aerophagia, fermentation, obstruction).
    • Large intestinal contents – mixed soft tissue and gas appearance or more granular.
    • GIT is uncommonly empty in chelonians.
    • Barium contrast studies reported for a variety of species – EBT, red-eared slider, leopard tortoise, Geoffroy’s side necked turtle, yellow-spotted river turtle, and Arrau river turtle (dosages vary by species and temperature).
      • RES transit time: 72-192 hours.
      • Leopard tortoise: 144-166 hours.
    • Iodinated contrast studies – red-eared slider, Greek tortoise, faster transit times.
      • GT had faster transit times between 27 and 34 deg C.
    • Avoid respiratory administration.
    • Generalized ileus –progressive accumulation of ingesta or abnormal motility.
    • Severe gas distension – obstruction.
    • Fish hooks are common.
89
Q

Describe the radiographic evaluation of the chelonian reproductive tract.

A

Reproductive system

  • Reproductive/dystocia monitoring – evaluate uniformity of shell and size, thickness.
  • Ultrasound and CT recommended as second line.
  • Dystocia – enlarged eggs, fractured shells, follicular stasis, normal eggs outside of reproductive season.
  • Increased but even mineralization and smooth – usually prolonged retention in lower repro.
  • Thickened and rough shells can indicate uric acid and mineral deposition of shells that have been retained within urinary bladder.
  • Soft tissue mass effect – follicular stasis is differential, soft tissue accumulation can also indicate yolk coelomitis.
90
Q

Describe the radiographic evaluation of the chelonian urinary system.

How do uroliths appear?

What is severe bladder distension indicative of?

A

Urinary system

  • Expansive in volume, bilobed, can extend to mid cranial coelom close to stomach.
  • Commonly evaluated for urinary calculi – urate is most common in chelonians (radiolucent, but can mix with other minerals); more common in left lobe of bladder; irregularly rounded shape; obstruction uncommon.
  • Severe urinary bladder distension due to spinal fracture reported.
  • Kidneys hard to see and renal calcification is not commonly seen.
91
Q

Describe the radiographic evaluation of the chelonian musculoskeletal system.

How does a fracture line change radiographically over time?

How does joint disease appear radiographically?

What lesions might be seen with nutritional secondary hyperparathyroidism?

A

Musculoskeletal system

  • Radiography most useful for this in chelonians.
  • Long bones have distinction between cortical and medullary regions, but less distinct than mammals.
  • The pectoral girdle bones should be clearly visualized with sharp margins, small medullary canal and homogenous cortical radiopacity.
  • Shell fractures – help document the degree of displacement and extensiveness of shell trauma and investigate concurrent soft-tissue abnormalities associated with injuries (pulmonary); CT helpful.
  • Healing of shell – fibrous callus -> fracture lucent line can persist for years; recommended to repeat rads 10-20 weeks after stabilization, complete healing/remodeling may take 12-18 months.
  • If carapace fracture crosses midline, spinal fracture should be expected – further imaging modalities helpful to evaluate spinal cord.
  • Orthogonal views of limbs – lateral and craniocaudal/dorsopalmar(plantar) images.
  • CTs better define abnormalities- good for surgical planning.
  • Osteomyelitis and septic arthritis common – lytic (greater degree than mammals, accompanied by caseous abscessation) and osteoproliferative changes, soft tissue enlargement.
  • Gout – soft tissue mineralization, gout tophi, pseudogout.
  • Degenerative joint disease common – they live a long time, trauma, resolved septic arthritis.
    • Periarticular mineral proliferation.
    • Osteophytes.
    • Early stages – difficult to distinguish active septic arthritis from degenerative changes.
    • Advanced disease – soft tissue mineralization around joint (not common in mammals) – limit range of motion.

Nutritional secondary hyperparathyroidism common.

  • Know expected degree of mineralization for species and life stage.
  • Juveniles have reduced mineralization for a year; assess pectoral or pelvic girdles.
  • Diffusely decreased opacity of bones is primary abnormality.
  • Cortical bone thinning, shell and rarely limb thickening, pathologic fractures.
92
Q

Describe the relocation of giant tortoises in the galapagos islands.

What are the four major program acitivities?

What is the effect of pest species on the isalnds?

Describe head starting of giant tortoises? What are they fed?

What ecosystem resoration efforts are underway?

A

Ch. 61 – Medical Aspects of Giant Tortoise Relocation in the Galapagos Islands (F9)

  • Giant tortoise population decimated by human influence with 3 species that has gone extinct.
  • Keystone species

Rebuilding tortoise populations involves 4 major program activities:

  1. Captive breeding and release
  2. Head-starting and release of hatchlings from wild nests
  3. Release of sterilized hybrid adult animals
  4. Repopulating islands with breeding populations of genetically selected surrogate species
  • Galapagos islands discovered in 1535 - as many as 250000 tortoises at the time
  • Tortoises harvested from 17th to 20th century
  • Population estimate in 1970s to be as low as 8000 individuals

15 species described with two general morphologies:

  1. Dome shaped (carapace has smooth and rounded contour)
  2. Saddleback (front of carapace raised and looks like a spanish saddle from the side)
  3. Dome shaped animals generally larger and are found on islands with higher elevation where vegetation is denser
  4. Saddleback smaller (males up to 100kg) and are found on more arid islands. Elevation of the front of the carapace allows animals to reach higher when foraging in dry vegetation
  5. Few populations are intermediate between dome and saddleback shapes
  • Population impacts: Human predation, introduction of livestock, introduction of dogs, cats, norway rats, black rats, house mice, invasive plants >> destruction of food sources, destruction of canopy of vegetation that naturally captures fog and mist precipitation, predation of eggs and hatchlings, damage to nesting areas

Restoration of Giant Tortoise Populations

  • Restoration of tortoise populations dependent on eradication of introduced pest species and removal of hunting pressure through public education
  • No successful recruitment of hatchlings occurred on Pinzon island for nearly 100 years due to predation by black rats. Hatchling eggs and hatchlings still in the nest were collected and transported to Santa Cruz island for rearing until 5yo and then returned.
  • Other populations from Santiago island and santa cruz island were identified for head starting.

Head starting

  • Hatchlings and eggs are collected from nesting areas on Pinzon, Santiago and Santa Cruz islands
  • Nests opened with hand digging, movement only during late incubation, egg orientation kept the same as it was in the nest.
  • Eggs and hatchlings transported in small plastic containers with lightly moistened vermiculite to maintain humidity
  • Embryonic mortality encountered when incubation temperature too high or low and eggs incubated at lower temperatures have longer incubation times.
  • Hatchlings are reared in rodent proof containers, outdoors on a substrate of crushed lava.
  • Diet consists of leaves of two plant species: Arrowleaf elephant ear and coral bean which are offered 3 times a week
  • Moved to preadaptation enclosure at 1.5 years of age where they have a substrate of lava rocks and natural vegetation up to 5 years of age
  • Transponders placed in left hind leg which will ID them permanently. Prior to release, each individual is branded on the carapace.
  • Released when curved carapace length of 20cm is reached, at approximately 3-4 years of age.
  • Release occurs in suitable habitat, near nesting zone where hatchlings were collected.

Ecosystem Restoration

  • GNPD intends to reintroduce tortoises where they have been driven to extinction, with the goal of restoring ecosystems
  • Woody vegetation obstructs tortoise movement, prevents the growth of cactus spp, and shades the ground - reducing opportunity for tortoises to feed and thermoregulate.
  • Feral goats have controlled woody vegetation, but at the same time threatened native endemic vegetation. Islands need tortoises to restore natural balance upon goat removal.
  • Genetically sound (as pure as possible) animals were collected for re-introduction in 2015

Surrogate Species Use as Ecologic Engineers

  • Pinta Island NP chose to use surrogate sterilized mixed heritage tortoises to fulfill the role of ecological engineers until a breeding population can be re-introduced. Surrogate females were oophorectomied and males phallectomized.
93
Q

Describe the raising of giant tortoises.

What are the two species of giant tortoise? How doe their diets differ?

Describe the breeding of these animals. When does mating typically occur.

What parameters are needed for incubation? How long does it take from pipping to hatching?

What are some common diseases to be concerned with in juvenile giant tortoises?

A

Fowler 6 Ch 18 - Raising Giant Tortoises

Basics:

  • Order Testudines, families Testudinae and Emydidae
  • Adults readily differentiated externally: Males have distinctly longer tails than females and the plastron is concave
  • Geochelone nigra = Galapagos tortoise
    • Current numbers est 12,000-15,000
    • Head wider than neck, short nose, small prefrontal scales, absent nuchal scute, single caudal scute
    • Diet more that of browser
  • Geochelone gigantea = Seychelles tortoise
    • Current numbers est 100,000
    • Approx 20% smaller than G. nigra
    • Head with similar diameter as neck, rounded ridge of nose, pointed nose, nuchal scute present in 98%, caudal scute mostly double, large prefrontal scales
    • Diet more that of grazer

Captive Management

  • Challenging to keep outside of natural climate due to large size and requirements
  • Indoor considerations
    • UV light, heated environment (24-27 C, hot spot of 38 C), 60% humidity, shallow pool for soaking, mud wallow if able

Nutrition

  • Little known about exact nutritional needs of these animals
  • Possible nutritional disorders include excessive geophagy with subsequent constipation, loose stools, bloat, metabolic bone disease
  • Natural diet: grass, leaves, flowers, and fruits
  • Carnivory and coprophagia have been observed but do not make up more than 0.5% of total diet
  • 90% chopped high-quality grass hay, other 10% includes variety of herbs, dried leaves, and occasionally produce
  • Fiber content very important (crude fiber content of 30-40% on dry-matter basis)
  • Recommend calcium supplementation
    • Ca:P ratio of 4:1 to 6:1 recommended
    • Oversupplementation of calcium may result in Ca concretions in UB or urolithiasis
  • Water at all times

Breeding Giant Tortoises

  • Spatial and social variability important
  • One male should be significantly larger than others, social groups should not be heavily male biased
  • Females must be able to avoid males
  • Large groups of at least 12 animals appears to increase breeding activity
  • Most mating in summer (temps >73.5 F) in the morning and late afternoon
    • Northern hemisphere: mating June-Oct, oviposition Nov-Mar
    • Southern hemisphere: mating Feb-May, oviposition June-Sept
  • Galapagos tortoises: follicles became preovulatory at a diameter of 40-42 mm and eggs laid 34-84 days after thin-shelled eggs detected in oviduct
  • Eggs with shells can be retained until next breeding season without adverse effects
  • Seychelles artificial incubation of eggs
    • At least 80% humidity, temperatures 82.4-87.8 F
    • Temps >84.2 F result in females
    • Incubation lasts 125-136 days at temps btwn 28-30 C (90 d at temps btwn 30-32 C)
  • Galapagos tortoise egg incubation
    • 29-32 C with 65% humidity, incubation lasts 105-164 days
  • Takes 2 days from pipping to hatching, best not to “assist”
  • Recommended to soak juvenile giant tortoises at least twice daily
  • Captive Galapagos tortoises at age 4 yrs were 2x as long and weighed 10x more than animals under natural conditions
  • FAST GROWTH
    • May lead to sexual maturity at younger age and shorter life expectancy
  • Biting
    • Bigger incidence if food is reduced, boredom, hunger, overcrowding

Restraint and handling

  • Dorsal positioning (automobile tire is useful); positioning on a flowerpot
  • Anesthesia: Medetomidine (0.1 mg/kg IM) and Ketamine (10 mg/kg IM) or Propofol (5 mg/kg IV)

Noninfectious Diseases in Juvenile Giant Tortoises

  • Metabolic developmental disease
    • Metabolic bone disease (differentiate btwn renal and nutritional origin)
    • Hypomineralization, fibrous osteodystrophy of bones, pyramiding of the carapace
  • Major predisposing factor is probably the phenotypic plasticity that enables giant tortoises to grow at an increased rate when food is available in large amounts
  • High protein levels in diet should be avoided because of a repeated link to pyramiding
  • Lower levels of humidity resulted in significantly increased pyramidal growth of the carapace
  • Other factors include endoparasites, nephropathy, and typhlohepatitis are possible causes for pyramidal shell development
  • Recommend UVB light to help prevent, enteral and parenteral doses of calcium and vitamin D should be given if developmental disorders are recognized
  • Recommend Annual radiographic exams

Infections Diseases in Juvenile Giant Tortoises

  • Respiratory tract disease
    • Secondary to stress, anatomy (poor mucociliary apparatus), weather (humid and cold), parasitism, deficiencies in husbandry/sanitation/nutrition
    • Most cases caused by bacteria (also viral, fungal, and parasitic agents)
    • Clinical signs usually appear late in process
      • Extended neck, inspiratory and expiratory Dyspnea, anorexia, lehtargy
    • DX: rads (especially lateral and craniocaudal views)
    • Aggressive antibiotic treatment necessary
      • Parenteral and nebulization
      • Use enrofloxacin cautiously
    • Increased humidity also proves beneficial by promoting proper hydration and breakup of necrotic and inflammatory debris
  • Endoparasites
    • More likely to occur in captivity secondary to stress, inadequate diet, low temperature, and overcrowding
    • Entamoeba invadens
      • CS: bloody diarrhea and subsequent dehydration, DX: fecal, TX: Metronidazole (50 mg/kg PO x 10 d)
    • Coccidia
      • CS: diarrhea or unthriftiness, tx only if clinical
    • Normal flora: Balantidium and Nyctotherus
    • Unknown clinical significance
      • Oxyurids and strongylids
94
Q

A recent study (by someone awesome) described bioencapsulation as a method of administering terbinafine to western pond turtles.

What is the scientific name of the western pond turtle?

What is the etiologic agent of shell mycosis in freshwater turtles?

Why is terbinafine a good choice for treatment?

How did bioencapsulation compare to oral gavage?

What dose was used?

A

JAVMA 84(1): 2023
Bioencapsulation is a feasible method of terbinafine administration in Emydomyces testavorans-infected western pond turtles (Actinemys marmorata)
Anthony J. Cerreta, DVM, MS1; Jennifer M. Reinhart, DVM, PhD, DACVIM, DACVCP1; Lauren R. Forsythe, PharmD, DICVP1; Matthew R. O’Connor, DVM, MPVM2; Karisa N. Tang, DVM, MS, DACZM2; Sherry Cox, PhD3; Krista A. Keller, DVM, DACZM1

Key Points:
- Emydomyces testavorans (ET) = emerging onygenalean fungus associated with chronic lesions in FW chelonians
- Effective mycosis treatment in reptiles involves long tx course (usually oral)
– Terbinafine = high margin of safety, rare reports of toxicity, drug accumulation in keratinized tissue, published MIC data for ET. Clears through liver & kidney
- Oral meds can be challenging in chelonians.
– Alternative = bioencapsulation (drug accumulated into biological substrate)
- Terbinafine 30mg/kg SID to EOD via encapsulation in earthworm may be useful tx for ET in WPTs
- Oral gavage of same dose followed by small meal may be useful, but steady-state predications were less favorable for this ROA

95
Q

A recent study evaluated ionized and total calcium in client owned chelonians.

What conditions produce lower calcium in reptiles?

What conditions elevate calcium in reptiles?

How is calcium contained within plasma?

What is recommended regarding the measuring of both values?

A

Relationship, difference, and diagnostic discordance between blood ionized and total calcium concentrations in client-owned chelonians.
Di Girolamo N.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association. 2022;260(S2):S101-110

Key Points:
- Lower calcium in reptiles with limited UVB, or low Ca diets
- Higher total calcium in females during repro activity and dependent on circulating estrogens
- Plasma calcium: ionized/free, protein bound, bound to other anions (phosphate, lactate, bicarb)
- iCa and tCa in chelonians do not necessarily reflect each other, their relationship is complex and affected by multiple factors
- Recommend measuring both and calculating bound Ca to evaluate overall calcium status and for repro disease
- tCa was higher in females and with repro disease but iCa was not affected by either suggesting bound Ca may be more useful

96
Q

A recent study described a new technique for ovariectomy in red eared sliders.

What are the two traditional ways to access the reproductive tract of female chelonians?

What was the new proposed technique?

Is it better for juveniles or adults?

A

JHMS 2022 32(2):130-5
Feasibility, Gross Postmortem Results and Participant Perception of Oblique Prefemoral Ovariectomy in Red Eared Sliders (Trachemys scripta elegans) During a Teaching Workshop
Di Girolamo N, Studer K, Maranville R, Caron M, Murciano G, Sellers M, Cococcetta C

Key Points:
- Chelonians have paired ovaries and oviducts
- Surgical access to the reproductive tract in chelonians can be achieved through:
– Incision on the plastron (i.e., plastronotomy)
– Plastronotomy is suspected to be more painful
– Prolonged healing times associated with it can be detrimental for aquatic and semiaquatic chelonians who must be dry-docked post-op
– Incision through the prefemoral fossa (i.e., prefemoral celiotomy)
- Modified prefemoral technique = positioning the chelonian in oblique dorsolateral recumbency
- Main advantage is that ovaries and oviducts bearing eggs tend to be heavier
- Gravity contributes in the exteriorization of the reproductive tract for its excision

TLDR: Oblique prefemoral ovariectomy may be an effective technique. In juvenile chelonians a fully endoscopic approach should be considered

97
Q

A recent study described detection of leptospira in italian tortoises.

How prevalent was it in this study?

Lepto has been detected in what organs of turtles previously?

A

Molecular and Serological Detection of Leptospira spp. in Italian Tortoises (Testudo spp.)
Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery, 32(2) : 136- 143

Key Points:
- Lepto DNA and antibodies seen in captive Hermanns and marginated tortoises (20% PCR prevalence, low seroprevalence)
- Need for standardization in direct and indirect diagnoses and harmonization of testing procedures
- Leptospira able to infect wide range of species – humans, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, birds and inverts
– Seasonal – dependent on availability of water in the environment
– Isolation of lepto from kidney and cloaca of turtles has been reported along with seroprevalence in multiple species in freshwater turtles raising the possibility of a potential zoonotic risk

98
Q

A recent paper described mycobacterial cloacitis in a Hermann’s tortoise.

What is the scientific name of the Hermann’s tortoise?

How did this case present?

What lesions were found on necropsy?

What was the mycobacterial species isolated?

A

JHMS 2022 32(3):162-70
Mycobacterial Cloacitis with Systemic Dissemination in a Hermann’s Tortoise (Testudo hermanni)
Ollé RD, Sevilla IA, Juan-Sallés C, Garrido JM, Santamaría JJ

Case:
- 21yo F Hermann’s tortoise presented for a 15-day history of apathy and tail swelling
– PE: BAR, swollen tail/cloaca, necrotic area at muco-cutaneous junction of the cloaca
– Cloacal lesion was debrided/disinfected, started on ceftazidime
– Switched to enrofloxacin/marbofloxacin after cloacitis worsened
– Ultimately, euthanized due to chronic weight loss, cloacal lesion progression

Key Points:
- Clinical signs consistent with chronic mycobacteriosis (non-healing external lesions, weight loss)
– No tail/distal hind limb edema like a previously reported group of Hermann’s tortoises
- Necropsy consistent w/ mycobacteriosis: granulomatous/necrosuppurative inflammation
– Presence of intralesional acid-fast bacilli confirmed the diagnosis
- Mycobacteriosis is seldom reported in reptiles
– Majority of reported cases involved aquatic and semiaquatic chelonian

TLDR: First case of cloacitis secondary to mycobacteriosis in a tortoise caused by an atypical mycobacterial agent from the M. terrae complex

99
Q

A recent study evaluated the effects of UVB on plasma hydroxyvitamin D3 concentrations in juvenile blanding’s turtles.

What is the scientific name of the blanding’s turtle?

Exposure to UVB has been shown to increase 25-OH Vit D in which three species?

What was the effect of UVB exposure on vitamin D3 in blanding’s turtles?

A

JHMS 2022 32(3) 225-229
Effects of Artificial Ultraviolet B Radiation on Plasma 25-Hydroxyvitamin D3 Concentrations in Juvenile Blanding’s Turtles (Emydoidea blandingii)

Key Points:
- In RES, leopard geckos, corn snakes, and burmese pythons exposure to artificial UVB increased plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D3. In ball pythons and hermann’s tortoises it did not
- This finding affirms that Blanding’s turtles can synthesize vitamin D via photochemical conversion
- Not measured in adults, further research needed as some studies in humans show that young adults can have more circulating vitamin D precursors
- Based on the results herein, we recommend exposing juvenile Blanding’s turtles to daily artificial UVB (290– 320 nm) as part of their standard care.

100
Q

A recent study described the treatment of severe ulcerative dermatitis in an Aubry’s flapshell turtle.

What family do softshell turtles belong to?
- What is different about their shell anatomy?
- Why does this make dermatitis a bigger deal?

What was key to treating this turtles lesions?

A

JHMS 2022 32(4):262-70
Successful Treatment of Severe Ulcerative Dermatitis in an Aubry’s Flapshell Turtle (Cycloderma aubryi)
DiRuzzo S, Praschag P, Miller L, Brodsky M

Key Points:
- Softshell turtles (Trionychidae) have unique shell anatomy:
– Bony shell is greatly reduced
– Flat bony elements made of compact layers w/ an inner cancellous core
– Shell surface is covered by leathery skin rather than horny scutes
– Dermatitis can progress quickly and invade the thin bony structures and coelom
- Benefits of photobiomodulation (PBM) are well described in the literature
– MOA not fully known but effects mediated via biologically active chromophore in the mitochondria and light-sensitive ion channels within cell membranes
– PBM reduces pain, positively influences all phases of wound healing, & increases wound tensile strength via acceleration of fibroblasts, collagen synthesis, & neovascularization
- PBM in reptiles have found varying results -> subjective improvement in quality/rate of healing

TLDR: PBM should be considered for treating ulcerative dermatitis in softshell turtles, especially in patients with delayed wound healing or chronic dermatologic lesions

101
Q

A recent study investigated the prevalence of mycoplasma in Alligator snapping turtles in Illinois.

What is the scientific name of the alligator snapping turtle?

What are the clinical signs associated with mycoplasmosis in chelonians?

How prevalent was mycoplasma in this population?

A

Mycoplasma sp. Detection in the State Endangered Illinois Alligator Snapping Turtle (Macrochelys temminckii).
Johnson SJ, Adamovicz L, Kessler EJ, Allender MC.
Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery. 2022;32(4):277-280

Background
- Alligator snapping turtles, family Chelydridae
- Mycoplasma spp. Thought to be commensal organism that may opportunistically cause disease
- CS in chelonians: blepharedema, oculonasal discharge, conjunctivitis, anorexia, lethargy; may recrudesce

Key Points
- ONE out of 156 samples from an Alligator snapping turtle headstart program in Illinois tested positive for Mycoplasma spp. And was sequenced for GenBank
– This positive turtle was in prerelease and wasn’t tagged so couldn’t compare to postrelease
- None of the turtles had clinical signs in pre or post-release

Conclusion: clinical significance of Mycoplasma spp. In common snapping turtles is unknown at this time but it is considered unlikely to be a threat to the endangered Illinois population at this time

102
Q

A recent study investigated glucocorticoids, lactate, and injury severity as prognostic indicators for rehabilitated Eastern box turtles.

What is the scientific name of the Eastern box turtle?

What is the primary glucocorticoid of reptiles?

Mortality within the first 24 hours was associated with what parameters?

Mortality within the first week was associated with what parameters?

A

The Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery, Volume 32, No. 4, 2022 pp. 281–290
Corticosterone, Lactate, and Injury Severity as Short- Term and Long-Term Prognostic Indicators in Eastern Box Turtles (Terrapene carolina carolina) with Traumatic Injuries Admitted to a Wildlife Rehabilitation Clinic
Emily K. Tucker-Retter, Gregory A. Lewbart

Key Points:
- Corticosterone is the primary glucocorticoid of reptiles
– Markedly elevated in cold stun kemps ridleys but no diff btwn survivor and nonsurvivors
– Elevated lactate at intake or rise in lactate in first 24h when initial lactate > 5 assoc with poorer px
- Lactate concentrations at intake significantly associated with 24h survival
- Turtles whose corticosterone increased in the first 24h were more likely to die in the first week that those that decreased or remained the same
- Survival at 1 month predicted only by triage score
– Lactate concentration signif assoc with triage score
- Lactate, H:L ratio and PCV all decreased over the course of hospitalization
- Healthy EBT had static mild elevations in corticosterone - no observable effect of handling

Take home:
- Mortality in the first 24hr of EBT admitted for traumatic injuries was assoc with elevated lactate and higher triage scores.
- Mortality after 24h but within first week was loosely associated with an increase in corticosterone.
- Mortality after first week but within 1 month was associated with higher triage scores.
- Tissue damage and acute severe stress likely contribute to mortality in first 24h to 1 wk

103
Q

A recent study evaluated the prevalence of reptile pathogens in diamondback terrapins.

What is the scientific name of the diamondback terrapin?

What pathogen were these animals positive for?

A

PREVALENCE OF MULTIPLE REPTILIAN PATHOGENS IN THE OROPHARYNGEAL MUCOSA, CLOACAL MUCOSA, AND BLOOD OF DIAMONDBACK TERRAPIN (MALACLEMYS TERRAPIN) POPULATIONS FROM MARYLAND AND GEORGIA, USA
Bryan S. Vorbach, Leigh A. Clayton, Willem M. Roosenburg, Terry M. Norton, Laura Adamovicz, Catherine A. Hadfield, and Matthew C. Allender
Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 58(4), 2022, pp. 782–790

Key Points:
- Diamondback terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin) – only exclusively brackish water turtle in NA
– Current threats – habitat destruction, drowning in crab pot, boat strikes
- Sampled terrapins from Maryland (free-ranging) and GA (in rehab)
- M. testudineum detected in both populations 🡪Maryland 87% (48 of 55) positive and Georgia 86% (6 of 7) positive from oropharyngeal-cloacal swabs
– No clinical signs seen in any turtle
– Juveniles had lower infection rates and copy number than adults 🡪 suggest horizontal transmission. Copy number greater in males then females

Take Home: High prevalence of mycoplasma testudineum in diamondback terrapins, though no clinical signs seen. Be careful not to comingle multiple turtles species in zoos.

104
Q

A recent study investigated the prevalence of haemogregarines in African bell hinge-back and African Home’s hinge-back tortoises in Nigeria.

What genus do these species belong to?

What are haemogregarines?
- What are the four genera?
- How are they transmitted?
- What are the clinical signs of infected animals?

How prevalent were these parasites? How intense were those infections?

How were these tortoises likely infected?

A

PREVALENCE AND PARASITE INTENSITY OF HAEMOGREGARINES IN AFRICAN BELL HINGE-BACK (KINIXYS BELLIANA) AND AFRICAN HOME’S HINGE-BACK (KINIXYS HOMEANA) TORTOISES IN IBADAN, NIGERIA.
Adetunji VE, Ogundipe GA, Adeyemo OK.
The Journal of Wildlife Diseases. 2022;58(4):825-835

Background
- Genus Kinixys: hinge-back tortoises, native to west/central Africa, omnivores, IUCN vulnerable
- Haemogregarines: apicomplexan intracellular parasites; global distribution of chelonian infx
– Four genera: Hepatozoon, Haemogregarina, Karyolysus, Hemolivia
– Transmitted by blood-sucking inverts (ticks, leeches, tsetse flies, sandflies, mosquitos)
– Tortoises likely ingest infected ticks vs freshwater turtles are bitten by leeches
– CS: anemia, low Hg, basophilia, eosinophilia, heterophilia, azurophilia

Key Points
- Intraerythrocytic sausage- or banana-shaped, slender or elongated gamonts, concave site facing nucleus, lying eccentrically or centrally in RBC cytoplasm
- Infected RBCs show hypertrophy with atrophied and marginalized nuclei
- Overall high prevalence, low intensity
- PCR more sensitive (75%) than light microscopy (58%)
- Parasite prevalence and intensity was higher in males and during the wet season
- Only ectoparasite identified: Amblyomma hard ticks
- Tortoises with ticks were more likely to be infected with haemogregarines

105
Q

A recent paper described degenerative cardiac disease in Galapagos tortoises and sulcata tortoises.

What are the scientific names of the Galapagos tortoise complex and the Sulcata Tortoise?

What was the most common clinical sign in these animals?

WHat findings were seen on diagnostic imaging?

What interventions were performed?

What findings were noted on histopathology?

A

JZWM 2023 54(1):164-174
DEGENERATIVE CARDIAC DISEASE IN TWO SPECIES OF TORTOISE (CHELONOIDIS NIGRA COMPLEX, CENTROCHELYS SULCATA)
Walker B, Eustace R, Thompson KA, Schiller CA, Leone A, Garner M

Key Points:
- Case series describes 9 Galápagos and 2 sulcata tortoises with degenerative cardiac disease
– All individuals were considered young for their species (x̄ = 19 yo)
– All individuals displayed clinical signs of illness prior to death
– Variable clinical signs included lethargy, anorexia, and peripheral tissue edema
– Tissue edema = common sign of severe cardiac disease in dogs, cats, and reptiles
– Five tortoises had peripheral edema in the limbs and cervical region
- Extensive antemortem diagnostic testing was not routinely performed
- Diagnostic imaging used in these cases included ultrasound and CT
– Pericardial effusion was the most common finding associated with cardiac disease
– Minimal pericardial effusion anecdotally reported as an incidental finding in tortoises
– Epicardial fibrosis/adhesions postmortem were likely due to chronic pericardial effusion
– Ultrasound-guided pericardiocentesis was performed using a dorsal midline approach
- Cardiomegaly was not obvious in any tortoises with degenerative cardiac disease
- However, age-based heart measurements for these species have not been established
- Myocardial fibrosis in tortoises ranged from mild to marked
– In reptiles associated w/ improper nutrition/husbandry, parasites, and infectious diseases
- Hepatic fibrosis/lipidosis and pulmonary edema commonly observed
– Hepatic lipidosis is a common, often reversible metabolic condition in anorexic tortoises
– Cardiogenic pulmonary edema occurs in CHF due to pulmonary venous congestion
– Coelomic effusion was reported in two cases

TLDR:
* Degenerative cardiac disease may be more prevalent in Galápagos and sulcata tortoises in human care than previously reported.
* Severe peripheral edema = most common clinical presentation.
* Pericardial effusion was the most common finding via imaging

106
Q

A recent paper described extravasation of contrast material following injections in the subcarapacial sinus in box turtles, sliders, and red-footed tortoises.

Describe the anatomy of the subcarapacial sinus.

Do chelonians have an epidural space?

How common was extravasation?

What sites was contrast material found in?

A

JZWM 2022 53(2):402-411
Extravasation Of Contrast Media After Subcarapacial Vessel Injection In Three Chelonian Species
Rockwell K, Rademacher N, Osborn ML, Nevarez JG

Background:
- Subcarapacial sinus/vessel
– Anastomosis of caudal branch of external jugular & common intercostal veins
– Along midline just cranial to the eighth cervical vertebrae
– Lymphatic structures run in close relationship, creating a high risk of lymph dilution
- Repeated sampling and IV injections have resulted in temporary to permanent paresis of the tail or hindlimbs, unilateral or bilateral forelimb paresis, and contamination of CSF
- Chelonians lack an epidural space; well-developed intrathecal or subarachnoid (or subdural) space surrounding the spinal cord filled with CSF

Key Points:
- All species had contrast extravasation in the subarachnoid space, with red-footed tortoises having the largest percentage (70% compared to 50% and 33% of box turtles and red-eared sliders, respectively).
- Extravasation of contrast in the trachea or bronchi (70%) and lungs (80%) was seen in the red-footed tortoises only.
- Majority of red-footed tortoises had contrast extravasation into unintended sites
– Incidence of extravasation was higher compared to box turtles and red-eared sliders
- Lungs of terrestrial chelonians occupy approximately 2/3 of the body cavity, whereas in loggerhead sea turtles their lungs only occupy the dorsal 1/3 of the body cavity
– The lungs of tortoises may take up a larger space in the cranial coelom compared to aquatic turtle species, providing a greater risk of accidental injury or injection
- Successful administration was seen in 100% of sliders vs. 50% of tortoises
– A higher success rate may be attributed to the shape of their carapace
- Iohexol is indicated for intrathecal use
– The dose of iohexol contrast used in this study was 300 mg/kg
– This resulted in a substantial volume to be administered to each individua
– Given the small relative vasculature anatomy, possible leakage was probable

TLDR: Caution is advised with phlebotomy and IV administration in chelonian species with more dome-shaped carapaces

107
Q

A recent study used CT to measure body fat reserves in the desert tortoise.

What is the scientific name of the desert tortoise?

Was CT effective in this measure?

How did CT compare to visual BCS or relative temporalis depth?

A

COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY FOR MEASURING BODY FAT RESERVES IN THE THREATENED MOJAVE DESERT TORTOISE (GOPHERUS AGASSIZII)
Margarete A.Walden,MS, Rachel Jania, DVM, Dipl ACVR,Matthew E. Kinney, DVM, Dipl ACZM, Anne Devan-Song, PhD, K. Kristina Drake, PhD, Todd C. Esque, PhD, and Kevin T. Shoemaker, PhD
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 53(2): 412–423, 2022

Take-Home Message:
- CT effective noninvasive technique to measure body fat location and volume.
- Fat volume calculated by CT did not correlate with visual assessment of BCS nor quantitative BCI.
- Relative temporalis depth calculated from CT was not related to BCS.

107
Q

A recent study investigated the bacteria and antibiotic sensitivities of abscesses in captive tortoises.

What type were the vast majority of bacteria isolated?

What antibiotics were recommended for each type?

What bacteria were isolated from shell abscesses?

How did that differ from skin wounds?

A

JZWM 2022 53(2) 424-432
BACTERIAL IDENTIFICATION AND ANTIBIOTIC SENSITIVITY FROM THE ABSCESSES OF CAPTIVE TORTOISES—CLINICAL ANTIBIOTIC RECOMMENDATIONS

Key Points:
- We observed that over 75% of the identified bacteria from tortoise abscesses were anaerobic bacteria
- Based on our antibiotic-sensitivity testing results, amikacin, ceftazidime, and ceftiofur were recommended to treat anaerobic gram negative bacterial infections
- amoxicillin, ampicillin, carbenicillin, and penicillin are proposed to treat abscesses caused by anaerobic gram-positive bacteria
- The three most frequently identified bacteria in shells were Proteus mirabilis, Enterococcus spp., and Escherichia coli
- The three most common bacteria found in skin wounds were Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumonia, and Aeromonas hydrophila

108
Q

A recent study investigated the health of nesting leatherback sea turtles.

What is the scientific name of the leatherback sea turtle?

The majority of nesting females presented with what clinical signs?

How did their bloodwork change over the course of the nesting season?

How did hatch success differ for relocated nests?

A

Leatherback Sea Turtle (Dermochelys coriacea) Nesting and Health Parameters in St. Kitts, 2003– 2016.
JHMS Volume 33, No. 1, 2023.
Kimberly M. Stewart1,2, Anne Conan2,4, Terry M. Norton1,3, Brayton A. Hill2 , Maria Smeriglio2 , Kathleen Clements2 , Darryn L. Knobel2

Key Points:
- Majority of nesting females presented with external lesions
– External lesions most frequently documented on the front flippers (38.1%) > carapace (21.6%)
– The most frequently observed lesion types were notches (41.2%) and linear lesions (34.1%)
– Lesions were most frequently found in the remodeling stage (76.6%) of healing
– Barnacle loads were most commonly mild > moderate > severe
- increases were seen in total white blood cell counts and number of monocytes in individual females from the first sample acquired during the nesting season to the last sample
– Negative correlation between monocyte counts and hatch success was documented in a nesting population of loggerheads in previous study (Flower et al 2018)
– Decreases TS, TP, Ca, and ALB between first sample and the last sample of the season
– Note – they used bromocresol green method which can overestimate albumin – rec. EPH
– No significant changes in hematological and biochem values observed between nesting seasons.
- hatch success for relocated nests was significantly lower than non-relocated nests, but w/o relocation the nests would have been lost to tidal inundation, erosion, depredation, poaching, vehicular or pedestrian traffic

109
Q

A recent study investigated the protein requirements of captive juvenile green turtles.

What is the scientific name of the green turtle?

What is the estimated dietary protein requirement for juveniles?
- What diet items worked best?

How does the diet of the green turtle change with age?

A

ZB 2023 42(1):86-97
Dietary protein requirement for captive juvenile green turtles (Chelonia mydas)
Jualaong S, Thongprajukaew K, Kanghae H, et al

Key Points:
- Juvenile green turtles are carnivorous but turn omnivorous or herbivorous with age
- Green turtles fed with 40% protein had significantly higher performance
– Also improved calcium and phosphorus deposition in carapace
- Estimated optimal protein requirement for green turtles as 40.6%
– This dietary protein level is similar to freshwater turtles
– No negative effects on the green turtles at this dietary protein level
- Green turtles fed with carnivorous fish feed containing 44.8% protein had superior growth and feed utilization vs, those fed with shrimp (42.5% protein) or omnivorous fish feed (18.5% protein)
– Supports artificial diets to rear captive green turtles for head-starting before release to the natural environments

TLDR: The estimated optimal dietary protein level for juvenile green turtles is about 40.6%