Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Alpaca and llama with high blood fat and ketones during pregnancy
By Anderson, D E et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·1994·Department of Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Hyperlipemia and ketonuria in an alpaca and a llama.
Plain-English summary
A pregnant alpaca and a llama were brought in for being very lethargic and not eating. Both animals had cloudy blood and high levels of fat and cholesterol in their blood, along with ketones in their urine. The alpaca had serious complications and sadly died shortly after giving birth to a stillborn cria (baby alpaca). In contrast, the llama received treatment with fluids and insulin, which helped stabilize her condition. She was able to continue her pregnancy and later gave birth to a healthy cria two months after leaving the hospital.
People also search for: alpaca lethargy treatment · llama pregnancy complications · why is my alpaca not eating · cria care after birth · camelid health issues
Abstract
An alpaca and a llama in late stages of gestation were evaluated for lethargy, anorexia, and recumbency. Both camelids had cloudy, white, turbid serum, elevated serum triglyceride (1564, 5658 mg/dL, respectively) and cholesterol (158, 297 mg/dL, respectively) concentrations, and ketonuria. Signs of fetal stress were evident ultrasonographically in the alpaca, and a live cria was delivered by Cesarean section performed under general anesthesia. The alpaca developed severe metabolic acidosis, hepatic lipidosis, and acute renal failure secondary to renal lipidosis and died 36 hours after admission despite medical therapy. Histopathology revealed renal and hepatic lipidosis and neutrophilic pancreatitis. The cria died 72 hours after birth. The llama responded to IV electrolyte, dextrose, and regular crystalline insulin therapy. The pregnancy was maintained, and the llama was discharged from the hospital 20 days after admission. Two months after discharge, the llama gave birth to a live, 5 kg cria. Findings of hypertriglyceridemia, hypercholesterolemia, elevated sorbitol dehydrogenase activity, metabolic acidosis, azotemia, and ketonuria occurred in these two camelids. Based on this report, camelids appear to be similar to both horses and cattle in their response to severe energy imbalances in late gestation.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8064656/