A 4-month-old female blue wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) was presented for bilateral pelvic limb fracture repair. Clinical examination under anaesthesia revealed a water-hammer pulse and a haematocrit of 0.13. A xenotransfusion was performed using bovine (Bos taurus) erythrocytes because of inability to acquire a wildebeest donor. Clinical parameters improved following transfusion and the post-operative haematocrit value was 0.31. The wildebeest remained physiologically stable with a gradually declining haematocrit for the next three days. On the third post-operative day, the wildebeest refractured its femur and was humanely euthanised because of the poor prognosis for further fracture repair. Xenotransfusion using blood from domestic ruminants represents a life-saving short-term emergency treatment of anaemic hypoxia in wild ungulates. Domestic goats could be used as blood donors for rare ungulates where allodonors are not available.
CITATION STYLE
Buck, R. K., Stegmann, G. F., Poore, L. A., Shaik, T., Gray, T., & Zeiler, G. E. (2018). Xenotransfusion with packed bovine red blood cells to a wildebeest calf (Connochaetes taurinus). Journal of the South African Veterinary Association, 89. https://doi.org/10.4102/jsava.v89i0.1669
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