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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Skunk spray causes blood damage in dogs cats and red pandas

By Fierro, Brittney R et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2013·Michigan State University, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Skunk musk causes methemoglobin and Heinz body formation in vitro.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A Red Panda developed anemia with Heinz bodies (abnormal red blood cells) after being sprayed by a skunk. This study found that skunk musk can cause oxidative damage to red blood cells in dogs and cats, leading to similar conditions. The researchers mixed skunk musk with blood samples and observed that it resulted in changes indicating damage within just a few hours. This supports the idea that exposure to skunk spray can lead to serious blood issues in pets.

People also search for: why is my dog anemic · skunk spray effects on pets · Heinz body anemia in cats · treatment for dog with Heinz bodies

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A captive Red Panda developed a regenerative anemia with Heinz bodies after being sprayed by a skunk. A definite cause-and-effect relationship between skunk musk and oxidative erythrocyte damage has not been reported, but it was suspected in one reported case of a dog with Heinz body hemolytic anemia. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to determine whether skunk musk induces oxidative HGB damage in vitro. METHODS: Plasma and RBC were harvested from heparinized blood of 3 dogs, 3 cats, and a Red Panda. Skunk musk was solubilized in ethanol and mixed with plasma from each species to make stock solutions of 4% musk and 4% ethanol. Aliquots of RBC were resuspended in autologous stock solutions and solvent controls to yield musk concentrations of 0%, 0.04%, and 0.4% (by volume). Aliquots were incubated at 37°C for 4-72 hours and assessed for oxidative damage by visual inspection, optical absorbance spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and light microscopy after Wright and vital New Methylene Blue staining. RESULTS: Dose-dependent brown color and absorption changes characteristic of methemoglobin were present by 4 hours and increased over 24 hours (Red Panda) and 72 hours (dog and cat). Similarly, there were time-dependent (all species) and dose-dependent (dog and cat) increases in the number of Heinz bodies, which were present by 4 hours and numerous by 24 hours. CONCLUSIONS: In vitro, skunk musk causes Heinz body and methemoglobin formation in canine, feline, and Red Panda RBC, supporting the clinical association between Heinz body hemolytic anemia and skunk spray exposure.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24033800/