Epiglottal osseous metaplasia and presumptive hypertrophic osteopathy: Two unusual post-mortem findings in free-ranging wolves

One adult female Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) and one adult female Red Wolf (Canis lupus rufus) presented to the National Wildlife Health Center in November 2012 for necropsy. The older female Gray Wolf had elevations in the epiglottic cartilage, penetrating thoracic trauma, and gritty foci in the lungs....

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Main Author: Haynes, Ellen
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1813/33306
id ftcornelluniv:oai:ecommons.cornell.edu:1813/33306
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcornelluniv:oai:ecommons.cornell.edu:1813/33306 2023-05-15T15:49:39+02:00 Epiglottal osseous metaplasia and presumptive hypertrophic osteopathy: Two unusual post-mortem findings in free-ranging wolves Haynes, Ellen 2013-05-01 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1813/33306 en_US eng Senior seminar paper Seminar SF610.1 2013 https://hdl.handle.net/1813/33306 Wolves -- Diseases -- Case studies Wolves -- Wounds and injuries -- Case studies Wolves -- Parasites -- Case studies term paper 2013 ftcornelluniv 2020-02-02T14:50:27Z One adult female Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) and one adult female Red Wolf (Canis lupus rufus) presented to the National Wildlife Health Center in November 2012 for necropsy. The older female Gray Wolf had elevations in the epiglottic cartilage, penetrating thoracic trauma, and gritty foci in the lungs. Histology of the epiglottis revealed foci of ossification in the elastic cartilage layer. Both the epiglottal and lung lesions were classified as osseous metaplasia. The cause of death was penetrating thoracic trauma, presumptively from intraspecific aggression. Necropsy findings on the Red Wolf, a 4.5 year old female, included bony nodules bilaterally on the medial radii and lateral metatarsals, a heavy burden of heartworms (Dirofilaria immitis) in the right heart and caudal vena cava, subcutaneous hemorrhage along the left neck and thorax, and heavy scavenging of the abdomen. Radiographs and histology revealed periosteal new bone formation at the bony lesions. Blunt trauma was the presumptive cause of death, with incidental hypertrophic osteopathy secondary to heartworm disease. Other/Unknown Material Canis lupus gray wolf Cornell University: eCommons@Cornell
institution Open Polar
collection Cornell University: eCommons@Cornell
op_collection_id ftcornelluniv
language English
topic Wolves -- Diseases -- Case studies
Wolves -- Wounds and injuries -- Case studies
Wolves -- Parasites -- Case studies
spellingShingle Wolves -- Diseases -- Case studies
Wolves -- Wounds and injuries -- Case studies
Wolves -- Parasites -- Case studies
Haynes, Ellen
Epiglottal osseous metaplasia and presumptive hypertrophic osteopathy: Two unusual post-mortem findings in free-ranging wolves
topic_facet Wolves -- Diseases -- Case studies
Wolves -- Wounds and injuries -- Case studies
Wolves -- Parasites -- Case studies
description One adult female Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) and one adult female Red Wolf (Canis lupus rufus) presented to the National Wildlife Health Center in November 2012 for necropsy. The older female Gray Wolf had elevations in the epiglottic cartilage, penetrating thoracic trauma, and gritty foci in the lungs. Histology of the epiglottis revealed foci of ossification in the elastic cartilage layer. Both the epiglottal and lung lesions were classified as osseous metaplasia. The cause of death was penetrating thoracic trauma, presumptively from intraspecific aggression. Necropsy findings on the Red Wolf, a 4.5 year old female, included bony nodules bilaterally on the medial radii and lateral metatarsals, a heavy burden of heartworms (Dirofilaria immitis) in the right heart and caudal vena cava, subcutaneous hemorrhage along the left neck and thorax, and heavy scavenging of the abdomen. Radiographs and histology revealed periosteal new bone formation at the bony lesions. Blunt trauma was the presumptive cause of death, with incidental hypertrophic osteopathy secondary to heartworm disease.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Haynes, Ellen
author_facet Haynes, Ellen
author_sort Haynes, Ellen
title Epiglottal osseous metaplasia and presumptive hypertrophic osteopathy: Two unusual post-mortem findings in free-ranging wolves
title_short Epiglottal osseous metaplasia and presumptive hypertrophic osteopathy: Two unusual post-mortem findings in free-ranging wolves
title_full Epiglottal osseous metaplasia and presumptive hypertrophic osteopathy: Two unusual post-mortem findings in free-ranging wolves
title_fullStr Epiglottal osseous metaplasia and presumptive hypertrophic osteopathy: Two unusual post-mortem findings in free-ranging wolves
title_full_unstemmed Epiglottal osseous metaplasia and presumptive hypertrophic osteopathy: Two unusual post-mortem findings in free-ranging wolves
title_sort epiglottal osseous metaplasia and presumptive hypertrophic osteopathy: two unusual post-mortem findings in free-ranging wolves
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/1813/33306
genre Canis lupus
gray wolf
genre_facet Canis lupus
gray wolf
op_relation Senior seminar paper
Seminar SF610.1 2013
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/33306
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