The Armed Forces Institute of Pathology

Department of Veterinary Pathology

WEDNESDAY SLIDE CONFERENCE

2000-2001

 

CONFERENCE 1

6 September 2000

 

Conference Moderator: COL William Inskeep, II

                                    Chair, Department of Veterinary Pathology

                                    Deputy Director, The Armed Forces Institute of Pathology

                                    Washington, DC 20306-6000

 

 

CASE II           CASEIII          CASEIV

 

CASE I – 00-017 (AFIP 2736228)

 

Signalment: 12-year-old, castrated male, soft-coated wheaten terrier canine

 

History: The dog had signs of osteoarthritis and had been on treatment with carprofen for several months.  It developed vomiting and diarrhea, at which time carprofen treatment was discontinued.  It also developed anorexia, had intermittent vomiting and diarrhea and lost 10-12 lb over a 30-day period.  Serial blood tests indicated a nonregenerative, normocytic, normochromic anemia, leukocytosis, hypoproteinemia and hypoalbuminemia.  He received prednisone, cimetadine, misoprostal, sucralfate, metronidazole, amoxicillin, azathioprine and oral Tylan during various stages of treatment for the inflammatory bowel disease and gastritis.  Approximately 12 hours before his death, he developed a fever, hyperventilation, and became moribund.

 

Gross Pathology: External exam - The dog was thin and had a decreased amount of body fat.

Internal exam - There was approximately 50 ml of clear fluid in the abdominal cavity.  The thoracic cavity contained approximately 100 ml of tannish-colored fluid.

Respiratory system - There was fibrin deposition on the right parietal pleura and hemidiaphragm.  The right caudal lung lobe was congested, with fibrin deposited on the pleural surface.  The left caudal lung lobe was hemorrhagic and exuded clear fluid on cut surface.  There were multiple organized thrombi in the pulmonary vessels of the right and left caudal lung lobes.

Urogenital system - There was a fluid-filled cyst, approximately 3 cm in diameter, involving the cranial pole of the left kidney.  Both kidneys had multiple small, depressed areas involving the subcapsular surface.

Digestive system - There were prominent chyle-filled, dilated lymphatics involving the serosal surface of the small intestine.  In addition, there were multiple small nodules arising from the lymphatics.  The wall of the duodenum was thickened and there was marked submucosal congestion in the duodenum and extending into the jejunum.  The pancreas had several small nodular areas and an area with adhered omentum.  The liver had multiple small to medium-sized areas which were pale in color and extended deep into the parenchyma on cut surface.

 

Laboratory Results: Data not included.  A summary was provided in the history, and in addition, E. coli was isolated from blood and lung at necropsy.

 

Contributor’s Diagnoses and Comment: Marked intestinal lymphangiectasia and mild granulomatous lymphangitis.

Marked focal duodenal crypt dilatation and mild epithelial cell metaplasia.

 

Intestinal lymphangiectasia with lymphangitis has been associated with protein losing enteropathy in dogs.  This syndrome has been associated specifically with the soft-coated wheaten terrier (SCWT) breed ranging from 6 months to 12 years of age.  There are strong indications that there may be a genetic predisposition for the disease in SCWT.  Thromboembolic complications leading to death have also been associated with this syndrome in SCWT.  The thrombo-embolic complications may have been related to disseminated intravascular coagulation, with resulting lesions within the lung and liver.  Marked focal dilatation of the duodenal crypts and metaplasia/regeneration of the crypt epithelium suggest a chronic, toxic irritation of the duodenum and may be related to focal concentrations and toxicosis of carprofen and/or prednisolone.

 


AFIP Diagnoses: 1.  Small intestine: Lymphangiectasia, multifocal, mild to moderate, with granulomatous lymphangitis, soft-coated wheaten terrier, canine.

2.  Small intestine: Crypt ectasia, multifocal, mild, with necrosis and neutrophilic and histiocytic inflammation.

 

Conference Comment: The soft-coated wheaten terrier is predisposed to the two syndromes of protein-losing enteropathy (PLE) and protein-losing nephropathy (PLN).  Although the precise mode of inheritance of these diseases is unknown, pedigree analysis has shown these dogs to be related to a common male ancestor.  PLE and PLN in this breed have unique features that include the common concurrence of PLE with PLN (PLE often seen prior to PLN signs), a female predisposition and a variable age range for the onset of clinical signs.  The genetic defects involved in PLE and PLN in this breed may be complex and may include an immunoregulatory dysfunction, an altered response to an environmental trigger, and an ultrastructural or developmental defect of lymphatics, vasculature, epithelia, and/or basement membranes.  Lymphangectasia may cause leakage with inflammation, or inflammation may cause dilation of lymphatics; however, in one study, surgical ligation of lymphatics did not cause inflammation and granuloma formation.  The crypt dilation and abscessation may be related to toxic mucosal irritation from drug therapy.  Similar lesions are described in cases of inflammatory bowel disease and protein-losing enteropathy.

In this case, the dog had hypoproteinemia and hypoalbuminemia.  The differential diagnosis for hypoalbuminemia due to decreased production would also include malnutrition, exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, and chronic liver disease.  With exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, decreased serum trypsin-like immunoreactivity (TLI) and BT-PABA tests would indicate a deficiency in trypsinogen and chymotrypsin, respectively.  High folate and low cobalamin concentrations could reflect intestinal bacterial overgrowth due to a lack of the bacteriostatic effect of pancreatic enzymes.

A loss of antithrombin III through the kidneys due to the PLN was postulated as possibly contributing to the formation of pulmonary thrombi.  Antithrombin III activity also decreases in hypercoagulative disorders (e.g., disseminated intravascular coagulopathy).

Endoscopic biopsy sampling of the intestinal mucosa may show an artifactual dilation of lacteals caused by surgical manipulation.  A deep endoscopic biopsy sample, attained by the collection of a second sample from the same site, may give a more accurate picture of the underlying disease process.

 

Contributor: M.S. Hershey Medical Center, Penn State University, Department of Comparative Medicine, H054, 500 University Drive, Box 850, Hershey, PA  17033

 

References: 1.  Littman MP: 1999 ACVIM Proceedings: Wheaten terrier PLE-PLN. (recently published)

2.  www.scwtca.org/scwtvmont.htm

3.  www.cvm.ncsu.edu/research/SCWT/ple.htm

 

 

 


CASE I          CASEIII          CASEIV

 

CASE II – S96-2403 (AFIP 2596318)

 

Signalment: 8-year-old, spayed female, domestic shorthair cat

 

History: This cat was presented to a veterinarian because of a local ulcerative skin problem of several months duration.  Two other cats lived in the same household, one of them since 8 years of age, the other since several weeks of age.  All three were kept indoors.  Their food consisted of commercial cat food and occasionally fresh meat.  The clinical evaluation and the routine laboratory blood examination indicated no abnormalities.  Serological tests for FIV and FeLV were negative.  An X-ray of the lungs showed multifocal, ill-defined interstitial densities.  Due to treatment failure the cat was euthanized.

 

Gross Pathology: Several firm, alopecic, partly ulcerated, intracutaneous nodules (diameter 0.5-1 cm) were found on the inner aspect of the right hind leg.  The skin of the outer side of the same leg was characterized by a large, 5x7 cm, thickened, well-demarcated, alopecic, and mostly ulcerated area.  The cut surface of all lesions revealed intracutaneous to subcutaneous, firm, gray to pink nodules.  All lung lobes contained multiple small, 3-8 mm diameter, irregularly shaped, well-defined, firm, homogenous white to yellow nodules.  The pulmonary and mesenteric lymph nodes were enlarged and cut surfaces were uniform and pale.  The intestine showed no gross lesions.

 

Laboratory Results: Acid fast bacteria were seen in Ziehl-Neelsen stained smears of lung and mesenteric lymph nodes.  The rod-shaped, medium long, slender and slightly curved bacteria were single or in groups.  Mycobacteria were cultured in the BacTecT 460TB® system.  The mycobacteria could be classified by “transcription-mediated amplification” (MTD, Genprobe®) as belonging to the Mycobacterium tuberculosis group.  Unfortunately, the subcultivation did not succeed and further identification was not possible.  No other bacteria could be isolated in the organs submitted for bacteriological examination (liver, spleen, kidneys, lungs, pulmonary lymph nodes, intestine, mesenteric lymph nodes, skin).

 

Contributor’s Diagnoses and Comment: 1.  Skin: Dermatitis, granulomatous, multifocal to coalescing, severe. 

2.  Lungs: Pneumonia, granulomatous, multifocal, moderate.

3.  Lymph nodes (pulmonary, mesenteric) [not submitted]: Lymphadenitis, granulomatous, severe.

Etiology: Mycobacteria, tuberculosis group.  The detection of few intracellular, acid fast, rod-shaped bacteria in the above-mentioned organs is consistent with the etiological diagnosis of tuberculosis.

         

          Histological examination of the skin reveals ulceration (not on all sections) and a dense nodular to coalescing cellular infiltrate in the dermis and subcutis which expands and spreads to the surrounding tissue.  The nodules consist mainly of histiocytes and epithelioid cells accompanied by a proliferation of fibroblasts.  A considerable number of lymphocytes and few neutrophils and plasma cells are scattered in the granulomas.  Small foci of necrosis are surrounded by few neutrophils and lymphocytes.  Within lung lesions, there are nodules consisting of histiocytes, epithelioid cells, proliferating fibroblasts and scattered inflammatory cells.  In both organs, single intracellular acid fast bacilli could be detected with Ziehl-Neelsen stain (transparency).

          Feline mycobacterial infections can be divided into three forms: classical tuberculosis (caused by M. bovis, M. tuberculosis, the recently described variant that has characteristics of M. bovis and M. tuberculosis, and M. microti), feline leprosy (caused by M. lepraemurium) and atypical mycobacteriosis (caused by M. avium, M. fortuitum, M. thermoresistible, M. xenopi, M. phlei and M. smegmatis.  Members of the first group are considered obligate pathogens.

          Tuberculosis in cats is mainly caused by M. bovis.  The cats were believed to be infected by ingestion of contaminated fresh milk or meat.  Since tuberculosis in cattle has been eradicated, those forms have nearly disappeared.  Being a primary human pathogen, feline infections by M. tuberculosis are considered an inverse zoonosis.  Recently, several cases of tuberculosis were described, where the organisms isolated had cultural characteristics of M. tuberculosis and M. bovis.  There are only very few reports concerning the isolation of M. microti.  M. avium, an opportunistic organism belonging to the atypical mycobacteria causes lesions indistinguishable from those of the tuberculosis complex.  Cats are highly resistant to M. avium and reports of infections are rare.

          In this case, the organisms were identified as members of the tuberculosis group.  The health status of the persons in contact with this cat was checked.  The owner, the treating veterinarian and one of his technicians had a positive tuberculin reaction of 10 mm or more.  None of them showed signs of active tuberculosis in the clinical examination or in the thoracic X-ray.  Nevertheless, preventive chemotherapy for 6 months was prescribed.

          The incidence of human tuberculosis in Switzerland is generally low and slowly decreasing.  Nevertheless, an increase of tuberculosis in immigrants and immunocompromised patients is evident.  In some countries of central Europe (e.g., Italy, Denmark, the Netherlands), the number of newly infected persons has even increased by 30-40% between 1990 and 1994.  In our case, the origin of the organism remains unclear.  The owner had no known contact with an infected person.  The cat had no contact to other animals than those in the same household, apart from a one-week stay in an animal boarding establishment 7 years previously.  The other two cats showed no sign of illness at clinical examination and they were radiographically negative.

 


AFIP Diagnoses: 1.  Haired skin: Dermatitis and panniculitis, granulomatous, focally extensive, severe, domestic shorthair, feline.

2.  Lung: Pneumonia, granulomatous, multifocal, moderate.

 

Conference Comment: Although often present in low numbers, as in this case, intracellular tubercle bacilli are recognized by their clubbed shape and beaded appearance.  Evidence of lesion encapsulation is often characterized by densely packed fibroblasts in a thin, fibrous connective tissue capsule.  Mycobacteria have the distinctive property of retaining hot carbolfuchsin stain after treatment with acid or alcohol.  This acid-alcohol fastness is due to the high lipid content of mycolic acid in the cell wall.  Cord factor and Wax D, also part of mycobacterial cell wall, contribute to the host’s granulomatous response to the organism.  Pathogenic mycobacteria are slow growing, often requiring several weeks to establish visible colonies, and their growth is inhibited unless enrichment media are used.

The differential diagnosis for granulomatous reactions in the skin and lung of a cat might include nocardiosis, actinomycosis, fungal infections and foreign body reactions.  M. tuberculosis has had a higher prevalence of infection in dogs than cats.  Aerosolized droplet transmission from respiratory secretions is the primary means of infection for other people or pets.  In general, tubercle bacilli are not as infectious as other bacterial pathogens since prolonged frequent exposure or large inocula are usually required.  In contrast to the sparse numbers of organisms within the cutaneous lesions in this case, cats infected with M. lepraemurium often have very large numbers of acid fast bacilli noted on histology or impression smears.

Unlike many species, cats do not react strongly to intradermally administered tuberculin but still have adequate immunity to tuberculosis.  Cats sensitized to bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) have responded to intradermal injections in the pinna; unfortunately, the response is inconsistent, infrequent, or transient.

 

Contributor: Institute of Veterinary Pathology, University of Zurich, Winterthurerstrasse 268, Zurich, Switzerland, CH-8057

 

References: 1.  Anonymous: Schweizerische Vereinigung gegen Tuberkulose und Lungenkrankheiten (SVTL): Richtlinien fur die preventive Chemotherapie der Tuberkulose (Therapie der Tuberkulose-Infektion). Bull BAG, Beilage, 4, 36-37, 1991

2.  Blunden AS, Smith KC: A pathological study of a mycobacterial infection in a cat caused by a variant with cultural characteristics between Mycobacterium tuberculosis and M. bovis. Vet Rec 138:87-88, 1996

3.  Drolet R: Disseminated tuberculosis caused by Mycobacterium avium in a cat. J Amer Vet Med Assoc 189:1336-1337, 1986

4.  Greene CE: Mycobacterial infections. In: Infectious diseases of the dog and cat, ed. Greene CE, pp. 558-572. WB Saunders Co., Philadelphia, PA, 1990

5.  Gunn-Noore DA, Jenkins PA, Lucke VN: Feline tuberculosis: A literature review and discussion of 19 cases caused by a unusual mycobacterial variant. Vet Rec 138:53-58, 1996

6.  Isaac J, Whitehead J, Adams JW, Barton MD, Coloe P: An outbreak of Mycobacterium bovis infection in cats in an animal house. Aust Vet J 60:243-245, 1983

7.  Loddenkemper R: Tuberkulose - ein immer noch drängendes problem. Spektrum der Wissenschaft Dossier 3, 106-107, 1997

8.  Orr CM, Kelly DF, Lucke VM: Tuberculosis in cats. A report of two cases. J Small Anim Pract 21:247-253, 1980

9.  Wynne Jones J, Jenkins PA: Is tuberculosis in domestic cats hazardous to human beings? Lancet 346:442-443, 1995

10.  Zellweger JP: La tuberculose en Suisse en 1996: Prévention et traitement. Schweiz Med Wochenschr, 126, 1112-1118, 1996

 

 

 


CASE I          CASEII          CASEIV

 

CASE III – H98-1202 (AFIP 2651778)

 

Signalment: 4-year-old, Texel-cross, female, ovine, Ovis aries

 

History: Intravenous inoculation of Chlamydia pecorum at 85 days gestation.  Normal lambing at term (single live lamb 4.75kg).  Localized placental lesion observed.

 

Gross Pathology: Approximately 25% of placental surface was affected.  There was pale soft thickening of the periphery of cotyledons with adherent cheese-like debris and marked edema of the adjacent intercotyledonary placenta.

 

Laboratory Results: Chlamydial organisms were isolated from the vaginal discharge and from the placenta.  Serology revealed seroconversion of the ewe (anti-chlamydial antibody titers assessed by complement fixation and indirect immunofluorescence).

 

Contributor’s Diagnosis and Comment: Placentitis, acute, necrotizing, multifocal with leucocytoclastic vasculitis; Chlamydia pecorum

 

          Enzootic abortion of ewes caused by Chlamydia psittaci infection is the most frequently diagnosed cause of infectious ovine abortion in Britain and is becoming increasingly prevalent in Ireland.  Affected ewes may abort close to term or deliver lambs of varying vitality at term.  Many intestinal chlamydial isolates of ruminants, formerly designated as non-abortion strains of C. psittaci, have been recently assigned to a new species, Chlamydia pecorum, on the basis of genetic analyses. Mid-pregnancy ewes were challenged with one such isolate to establish its abortifacient potential.  Two of four ewes parenterally inoculated with C. pecorum had placental lesions (one aborted and the other lambed normally); chlamydiae were isolated from the placentae.

          Histopathologically, there was focally extensive loss of the trophoblast layer that was replaced by aggregated nuclear debris.  Fibrinoid necrosis of superficial arterioles was apparent; these vessels were encircled by dense aggregates of degenerate leukocytes.  An infiltrate of neutrophils and fragmented nuclei occurred in the tunica media and adventitia of deeper arterioles; fibrin thrombi were present in the lumens of some blood vessels.  Congestion and edema of the chorionic stroma was accompanied by a light to moderate, diffuse infiltrate of neutrophils.  In some sections, intracellular clusters of basophilic bodies were seen in trophoblasts.

          The ovine placenta is classified as being villous, cotyledonary, (syn)-epitheliochorial and non­deciduate.  Some normal histological features of ovine placentation which may be observed are hematomas in the spaces between chorionic villi, hemosiderin deposits in adjacent trophoblasts and the presence of binucleated giant cells in the trophoblast layer.  Other infectious agents which cause necrotizing placentitis in sheep in the British Isles include Toxoplasma gondii, Campylobacter foetus, Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella dublin and Coxiella burnetti.  However, the marked vasculitis which develops with chlamydial infection is not usually a feature of placentitis due to any of these agents.  Furthermore, histochemical stains (modified Ziehl-Neelsen, Giemsa or Gimenez) or an immunoperoxidase technique can be used to demonstrate chlamydial organisms in situ.

 


AFIP Diagnosis: Chorioallantois: Placentitis, necrotizing, acute, multifocal, moderate, with severe vasculitis, crossbreed, ovine.

 

Conference Comment: Chlamydiae are obligate intracellular organisms, larger than viruses (200-1000 nm), possess DNA and RNA, form their own cell wall, and are susceptible to some antibiotics much like bacteria.  Chlamydiae have two morphological forms: elementary and reticulate bodies; an intermediate body is sometimes described as a transitional stage.  These organisms can play an active role in the internalization process by inducing phagocytosis in cells that do not normally engulf particles.

Chlamydiae have a strong affinity for the placenta.  After entering via the digestive or respiratory tract, or after activation of latent organisms, there is hematogenous spread to the placenta.  Organisms traverse capillary walls of maternal septa and enter extravasated blood in the lacunae.  Chlamydiae spread in periplacentomal chorioallantoic membrane by infecting syncytiotrophoblasts and forming colonies of elementary bodies in cytoplasmic vacuoles.  Chlamydiae, unlike Brucella, also replicate in endometrial epithelium.  Within endosome-bound inclusion bodies that fail to fuse with host lysosomes, elementary bodies transform to reticulate bodies and multiply to as many as 500 organisms per host cell.  Because of their inability to synthesize ATP, the organisms induce host cell mitochondria to closely appose the inclusion body.  After about 20 hours into the cycle, some of the reticulate bodies condense and mature, forming new elementary bodies.  Cells lyse and release organisms into chorionic mesenchyme, capillaries, and the intervillous-septum space.  Additional chorionic epithelial cells are parasitized and chorionic capillaries distribute organisms to the fetus.  Infection provokes inflammation in both cotyledon and caruncle causing necrosis, thrombosis and infiltration of neutrophils.  Separation of the placenta occurs with abortion due to a combination of placental damage and fetal injury.

          All organisms of the genus belong to four species: C. psittaci, C. trachomatis, C. pecorum (known as “enteric” chlamydia that have been isolated from gut, joints, lung and conjunctiva), and C. pneumoniae.  In addition to abortions, chlamydia can also cause intestinal infections and pneumonia in sheep, goats, cattle and swine; polyarthritis in calves and lambs; epididymitis in sheep; orchitis in bulls and mastitis in cows; keratoconjunctivitis in sheep and goats; conjunctivitis in cats; and sporadic bovine encephalomyelitis (SBE).

          The causative agent was not observed in sections examined in conference.

 

Contributor: University College Dublin, Department of Veterinary Pathology, Shelbourne Road, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4, Ireland

 

References: 1.  Banks WJ: Female reproductive system: comparative placentology. In: Applied Veterinary Histology, 3rd ed., pp. 457-465. Mosby Year Book, St. Louis, MO, 1993

2.  Buxton D, Barlow RM, Finlayson J, Anderson IE, Mackellar A: Observations on the pathogenesis of Chlamydiae psittaci infection of pregnant sheep. J Comp Path 102:221-237, 1990

3.  Fukushi H, Hirai K: Proposal of Chlamydia pecorum sp. nov. for chlamydia strains derived from ruminants. Int J Sys Bact 42:306-308, 1992

4.  Kennedy PC, Miller RB: The Female Genital System. In: Pathology of Domestic Animals, ed. Jubb KVF, Kennedy PC, Palmer N, 4th ed., vol. 3, pp. 387-445. Academic Press, New York, NY, 1993

5.  Markey B, Basssett H, Sheehy N, Gleeson M, Clements L: Chlamydial abortion in an Irish sheep flock. Irish Vet J 49:282-286, 1996

6.  Stamp JT, McEwan AD, Watt JAA, Nisbet DI: Enzootic abortion in ewes: transmission of the disease. Vet Rec 62:251-254, 1950

7.  Wooding FBP, Flint APF: Synepitheliochorial placentation. In: Marshall’s Physiology of Reproduction, ed. Lamming GE, 4th ed., vol. 3, pp. 330-335. Chapman & Hall, London, England, 1985

 

 

 


CASE I          CASEII          CASEIII

 

CASE IV – 97-10732 AA or BB (AFIP 2594107)

 

Signalment: 2-month-old, American quarter horse, female, equine

 

History: This foal was treated for pneumonia and diarrhea for 1 1/2 weeks by the referring veterinarian.  At the Veterinary Teaching Hospital, physical examination revealed weakness, irritability, dehydration and diarrhea.

 

Gross Pathology: Many skeletal muscles were pale, gritty in texture, with a chalky appearance on cut surface.  These changes were patchy to focally extensive and involved major muscle groups in the limbs, pectoral and neck muscles, longissimus dorsi and glossal muscles.  The laryngeal and cardiac muscles were not affected.  Other findings involved diffusely reddened mucosa in the ventral colon and a thrombosed large colonic vein.

 

Laboratory Results: A hemogram revealed a WBC count of 60,800 with 97% neutrophils and a PCV of 31.7%.  Serum chemistry values included total protein of 3.8 g/dL, creatine kinase (CK) of 7960 U/L and AST (SGOT) of 4496 U/L.

          Vitamin E and Trace Mineral Analysis - The foal’s liver vitamin E (7.16 ppm) and selenium (0.59 ppm) values were considered adequate.  The mare’s blood selenium value (0.29 ppm) was considered slightly elevated.  ICP analyses for liver copper, iron, manganese, magnesium, lead and zinc were all within normal limits.

          Enzyme Analysis - The foal’s blood glutathione peroxidase (125.27 EU/gHb) value was considered adequate.

          Bacteriology - Cultures of the lung, liver, spleen, small and large intestine failed to grow pathogenic bacteria, including Salmonella.

 

Contributor’s Diagnosis and Comment: Severe, subacute degenerative polymyopathy.

 

          The distribution, nature and extent of the muscle lesions observed in this foal, concomitant with a marked increase in serum enzymes associated with muscle damage (CK, AST) are consistent with changes described for nutritional myopathy or white muscle disease in foals.  Elevated CK values indicated active muscle damage as this enzyme has a relatively short half-life (6 hours) and should return to normal within 48 hours after muscle damage has stopped.  Serum AST has a longer half-life than CK and, thus, declines at a slower rate, but AST is less muscle-specific than CK.

          In the equine and other species, white muscle disease is most commonly associated with vitamin E and/or selenium deficiency.  Vitamin E and selenium act synergistically to prevent peroxidation of lipid membranes; vitamin E inactivates oxygen free radicals while selenium is a component of the enzyme glutathione peroxidase.  Glutathione peroxidase reduces organic hydroperoxides to alcohols which limits/prevents formation of oxygen free radicals.  In this foal, however, values for liver vitamin E and selenium, and blood glutathione peroxidase were considered adequate.  In addition, the mare of this foal had a slightly elevated, rather than reduced, blood selenium value.  Given these circumstances it is likely that additional factors were involved in the pathogenesis of the myopathy in this foal.

This case was further complicated by marked leukocytosis, microscopic pulmonary thrombosis, severe subacute ulcerative colitis, and colonic vein thrombosis.  Aspiration is likely a cause of the clinical pneumonia, as there was severe myodegeneration in the tongue.  Failure to isolate pathogenic bacteria from the colon and other organs is presumably related to the aggressive use of antibiotics.

 


AFIP Diagnosis: Skeletal muscle and tongue: Myodegeneration and necrosis, multifocal and coalescing, moderate, with mineralization and histiocytic myositis, American quarter horse, equine.

 

Conference Comment: Electrolyte disturbances in foals with rhabdomyolysis may be related to the electrolyte composition of skeletal muscle.  The musculature comprises 55% of total body mass and is a major reservoir for potassium and phosphorus.  Disruption of the intracellular and extracellular membrane boundary in cases of severe rhabdomyolysis results in an efflux of potassium and phosphorus and an influx of water, sodium, chloride, and calcium into the damaged muscle tissue.  The hyperkalemia, hyperphosphatemia, hyponatremia, and hypocalcemia coincide with the onset of clinical signs and increased CK activity.  The resultant hyperkalemia may be the most life-threatening electrolyte abnormality in these foals.  Treatment with mineralocorticoids, which act on the distal tubules and collecting ducts to enhance reabsorption of sodium and increase excretion of both potassium and hydrogen ions, may be used.  Diuretics or cation exchange resins can also be employed.

Myoglobinuria can be differentiated from hemoglobinuria by the addition of saturated ammonium sulfate, which will precipitate and remove the color caused by hemoglobin but not myoglobin.

Many other species are affected by vitamin E/selenium deficiency with varying manifestations.  Striated muscle necrosis can be seen in most species.  Other manifestations include mulberry heart disease, hepatic necrosis (hepatosis dietetica), and hemolytic anemia in pigs; steatitis (yellow fat disease) in cats, horses, and pigs; an exudative diathesis with cerebellar hemorrhage in poultry, and intestinal lipofuscinosis in dogs.

In foals with similar muscle lesions, both vitamin E and selenium values may be normal.  In this case, other factors may have contributed to the rhabdomyolysis.  Leukocytosis, pulmonary thrombosis, ulcerative colitis and colonic vein thrombosis raise the possibility of sepsis.

 

Contributor: University of Minnesota, Department of Veterinary Diagnostic Medicine, 1333 Gortner Avenue, St. Paul, MN 55108

 

References: 1. Dill SG, Rebhun WC: White muscle disease in foals. Compend Cont Educ Pract Vet, 7:S627-S635, 1985

2.  Gillian P, Valberg SJ, Madigan JM, Carlson GP, Jones SL: Electrolyte disturbances in foals with severe rhabdomyolysis. J Vet Intern Med 12:173-177, 2000

3.  Hulland JJ: Muscles and tendons. In: Pathology of Domestic Animals, ed. Jubb KVF, Kennedy PC, Palmer N, 4th ed., pp. 228-236. Academic Press, San Diego, CA, 1993

4.  Lee J, McAllister ES, Scholz RW: Assessment of selenium status in mares and foals under practical management conditions. J Equine Vet Sci 15:240-245, 1995

5.  Littman MP, Dambach DM, Vaden SL, Giger U: Familial protein-losing enteropathy and protein-losing nephropathy in soft coated wheaten terriers: 222 cases (1983-1997). J Vet Intern Med 14:68-80, 2000

6.  Moore RM, Kohn CW: Nutritional muscular dystrophy in foals. Compend Cont Educ Pract Vet 13:476-490, 1991

 

 

 

                                                          Randall L. Rietcheck, DVM

                                                          Major, Veterinary Corps, U.S. Army

                                                          Wednesday Slide Conference Coordinator

                                                          Department of Veterinary Pathology

Armed Forces Institute of Pathology

                                                          Registry of Veterinary Pathology*

 

 

 

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*Sponsored by the American Veterinary Medical Association, the American College of Veterinary Pathologists and the C. L. Davis Foundation.