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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Fat deposits and gut blockage in a female umbrella cockatoo

By Oglesbee, Barbara et al.·Published in Journal of avian medicine and surgery·2014·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Coelomic Granulomatous Fat Necrosis (Lipogranulomatosis) in an Umbrella Cockatoo (Cacatua alba).

Species:
bird

Plain-English summary

A 28-year-old female umbrella cockatoo was brought in because she was lethargic, not eating, regurgitating, and had swelling in her abdomen for six months. After tests showed a lot of fat deposits and an enlarged oviduct, surgery was performed, revealing firm, nodular fat surrounding her intestines, which caused adhesions and complications. Unfortunately, after surgery, she developed a blockage in her colon and was euthanized. The examination showed extensive fat necrosis and inflammation, a condition not previously reported in birds.

People also search for: umbrella cockatoo lethargy · bird regurgitation treatment · cockatoo abdominal swelling causes

Abstract

A 28-year-old, female umbrella cockatoo (Cacatua alba) was evaluated because of lethargy, anorexia, regurgitation, and coelomic swelling of 6 month's duration, which corresponded to cessation of egg laying. Radiographs and ultrasound examination demonstrated extensive deposits of coelomic fat and an enlarged oviduct. Exploratory celiotomy demonstrated copious amounts of firm, nodular fat completely surrounding the gastrointestinal tract, resulting in extensive chronic adhesions between intestinal loops. Free yolk was present in the cranial left coelom, yolk coelomitis was diagnosed, and a salpingohysterectomy was performed. Two days after surgery, the bird stopped passing feces and began regurgitating after eating, and a colonic obstruction was demonstrated via contrast radiography. Euthanasia was elected, and necropsy revealed an obstruction of the distal colon caused by extraluminal compression by adhesions of firm, nodular fat. Histologic examination demonstrated extensive fat necrosis with granulomatous inflammation, characterized by cords of necrotic fat surrounded by multinucleated giant cells and epithelioid macrophages with scattered lymphocytes and plasma cells and rare heterophils. The clinical signs, gross lesions, and histologic lesions are characteristic of massive fat necrosis (lipogranulomatosis) in ruminants and mesenteric panniculitis in humans and companion mammals. This is the first report, to our knowledge, of this disease in psittacine birds.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25843325/