An Argentine boa (Boa constrictor occidentalis) of 5 yr 7 mo of age was presented for respiratory problems and regurgitation. Radiographs revealed evidence of cardiomegaly and pneumonia. Blood smear examination revealed the presence of intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies in peripheral lymphocytes, consistent with inclusion body disease. Cultures of a tracheal wash sample resulted in growth of Ochrobactrum intermedium and Pseudomonas putida. Echocardiographic examination revealed a large vegetative lesion on the right atrioventricular valve with valvular insufficiency, a mildly dilated right atrium, and pulmonary hypertension. Postmortem examination confirmed the presence of pneumonia and bacterial endocarditis with dystrophic mineralization of the right atrioventricular valve, associated with different bacteria than those cultured from the tracheal wash. The present case is the first report of endocarditis in a boa constrictor and contributes to the rare reports of cardiac disease in snakes.
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1 March 2015
VALVULOPATHY CONSISTENT WITH ENDOCARDITIS IN AN ARGENTINE BOA (BOA CONSTRICTOR OCCIDENTALIS)
Morena B. Wernick,
José Novo-Matos,
Alessia Ebling,
Karolin Kühn,
Maja Ruetten,
Monika Hilbe,
Judith Howard,
Sarah Prohaska,
Jean-Michel Hatt
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Argentine boa
Boa constrictor occidentalis
cardiac disease
echocardiography
endocarditis
pulmonary hypertension.