Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Severe breathing trouble from lipid pneumonia in a ferret
By Perpiñán, David & Ramis, Antoni·Published in Journal of exotic pet medicine·2011·Maragall Exotics Centre Veterinari, Spain·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Endogenous Lipid Pneumonia in a Ferret ().
- Species:
- rodent
Plain-English summary
A 1-year-old female ferret was brought in for severe breathing problems and showed signs of being very cold and dehydrated. X-rays revealed fluid in her chest and issues with her lungs and heart. The vet tried antibiotics, steroids, and diuretics, which helped a little at first, but her condition worsened over the next two weeks. Sadly, the owners chose to euthanize her after 15 days, and a necropsy showed serious lung and heart issues caused by endogenous lipid pneumonia, a rare condition in ferrets that can lead to severe respiratory distress.
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Abstract
A 1-year-old female ferret was presented with an acute history of severe respiratory distress. Abnormal clinical signs noted during the initial physical examination were hypothermia, dehydration, pale mucous membranes, tachypnea, and severe dyspnea. Thoracic radiographs revealed pleural effusion, an enlarged cardiac silhouette, and areas of lung consolidation. Both blood and thoracic fluid were hyperproteinemic and hypergammaglobulinemic. Antibiotic, corticosteroid, and diuretic supportive treatment provided temporary improvement. After the initial positive response to treatment, the ferret's condition progressively deteriorated until the owners decided to euthanize the patient 15 days after initial presentation. Gross necropsy results revealed 5 mL of serosanguinous fluid within the thoracic cavity, cardiomegaly, and consolidated lungs that had a patchy, pale golden tissue pattern. The histologic diagnosis was endogenous lipid pneumonia. Findings suggest that endogenous lipid pneumonia can be associated with severe respiratory disease in ferrets.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32288675/