Pathology and Epidemiology of Oxalate Nephrosis in Cheetahs

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Abstract

To investigate cases of acute oxalate nephrosis without evidence of ethylene glycol exposure, archived data and tissues from cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) from North America (n = 297), southern Africa (n = 257), and France (n = 40) were evaluated. Renal and gastrointestinal tract lesions were characterized in a subset of animals with (n = 100) and without (n = 165) oxalate crystals at death. Crystals were confirmed as calcium oxalate by Raman spectroscopy in 45 of 47 cheetahs tested. Crystals were present in cheetahs from 3.7 months to 15.9 years old. Cheetahs younger than 1.5 years were less likely to have oxalates than older cheetahs (P =.034), but young cheetahs with oxalates had more oxalate crystals than older cheetahs (P

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Mitchell, E. P., Church, M. E., Nemser, S. M., Yakes, B. J., Evans, E. R., Reimschuessel, R., … Terio, K. A. (2017). Pathology and Epidemiology of Oxalate Nephrosis in Cheetahs. Veterinary Pathology, 54(6), 977–985. https://doi.org/10.1177/0300985817728556

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