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1 March 2001 STRONGYLOIDIASIS IN A COPE'S GREY TREE FROG (HYLA CHRYSOSCELIS)
Janet C. Patterson-Kane, Ralph P. Eckerlin, Eugene T. Lyons, Melissa A. Jewell
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Abstract

A male Cope's grey tree frog (Hyla chrysoscelis) died spontaneously with ventral subcutaneous edema and was necropsied. Thickening of the intestinal mucosa was observed histopathologically, with villous atrophy and intraepithelial nematodes present. Adult female Strongyloides sp. nematodes were isolated from the fixed intestinal tract, the first time this nematode genus has been recovered from this frog genus. Intestinal strongyloidiasis should be considered as a cause for protein-losing enteropathy and death in frogs.

Janet C. Patterson-Kane, Ralph P. Eckerlin, Eugene T. Lyons, and Melissa A. Jewell "STRONGYLOIDIASIS IN A COPE'S GREY TREE FROG (HYLA CHRYSOSCELIS)," Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 32(1), 106-110, (1 March 2001). https://doi.org/10.1638/1042-7260(2001)032[0106:SIACSG]2.0.CO;2
Received: 8 May 2000; Published: 1 March 2001
KEYWORDS
Hyla chrysoscelis
Intestine
strongyloidiasis
tree frog
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