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1 September 2014 OSTEOMYELITIS CAUSED BY SALMONELLA ENTERICA SEROVAR DERBY IN BOA CONSTRICTOR
Suyene O. de Souza, Renata A. Casagrande, Priscila R. Guerra, Cláudio E. F. Cruz, Evandro Veit, Marisa R. I. Cardoso, David Driemeier
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

After demonstrating chronic weight loss, prostration, and muscle flaccidness, a captive-bred 9-mo-old boa constrictor (Boa constrictor constrictor) died and was submitted for necropsy. Along the spinal column there were multiple, yellowish white, macroscopic nodules of 1–5 mm in diameter in the ventral side of the vertebral body and in the intervertebral spaces. Severe multifocal necrotizing osteomyelitis associated with granulomatous inflammation was the main histologic finding in the vertebral column. In the liver, there was discrete but similar granulomatous changes. Positive anti-Salmonella immunostaining was observed in the spinal column and in the liver. Salmonella enterica serovar Derby was isolated from fragments of the spinal column. These bacteria are important cause of disease in captive reptiles.

American Association of Zoo Veterinarians
Suyene O. de Souza, Renata A. Casagrande, Priscila R. Guerra, Cláudio E. F. Cruz, Evandro Veit, Marisa R. I. Cardoso, and David Driemeier "OSTEOMYELITIS CAUSED BY SALMONELLA ENTERICA SEROVAR DERBY IN BOA CONSTRICTOR," Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 45(3), 642-644, (1 September 2014). https://doi.org/10.1638/2013-0050R2.1
Received: 19 March 2013; Published: 1 September 2014
KEYWORDS
immunohistochemistry
osteomyelitis
pathology
salmonellosis
snake
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