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16 November 2020 A CLUSTER OF CASES OF THYROID HYPERPLASIA IN AQUARIUM-HOUSED TROPICAL MARINE TELEOSTS FOLLOWING A CHANGE OF SALT MIX BRAND
Marion Jalenques, Claire Vergneau-Grosset, Noémie Summa, Wahiba Ait Youcef, Jean-Francois St-Cyr, Stéphane Lair
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Abstract

Follicular thyroid hyperplasia was diagnosed in nine out of 32 (28%) marine tropical teleosts housed in a public aquarium over a 9.5-mo period. These proliferative lesions were considered to be the cause of death in five of these fish. Iodine concentration was undetectable in nonozonized water (<0.005 mg/L), suggesting that an environmental iodine deficiency was the cause of these hyperplastic thyroid lesions. The only significant modification in the husbandry was a change, 18 mo before the first case, of the commercial salt mix brand used to make artificial seawater. The iodine content in this replacement salt mix was five times lower than that of the salt mix used before. This case series suggests that the iodine concentration in this new salt mix was insufficient to maintain thyroid homeostasis in reef teleosts under the husbandry provided in this institution.

Copyright 2020 by American Association of Zoo Veterinarians
Marion Jalenques, Claire Vergneau-Grosset, Noémie Summa, Wahiba Ait Youcef, Jean-Francois St-Cyr, and Stéphane Lair "A CLUSTER OF CASES OF THYROID HYPERPLASIA IN AQUARIUM-HOUSED TROPICAL MARINE TELEOSTS FOLLOWING A CHANGE OF SALT MIX BRAND," Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 51(3), 725-728, (16 November 2020). https://doi.org/10.1638/2019-0221
Accepted: 22 April 2020; Published: 16 November 2020
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