Artigo Revisado por pares

Bacterial septicemias in two psittacine birds

1985; American Veterinary Medical Association; Volume: 186; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2460/javma.1985.186.09.983

ISSN

1943-569X

Autores

B. Panigrahy, B. G. Harmon,

Tópico(s)

Bird parasitology and diseases

Resumo

Pasteurellosis was diagnosed in a red-fronted conure (Aratinga wagleri) that had been bitten on its breast by a cat 2 weeks before death. The wound spread rapidly, involving the skin over the entire breast and the underlying musculature. Septicemia that followed dermatitis and myositis was the cause of death. Pasteurella multocida was isolated in pure culture from the heart blood and liver. Diagnosis of Escherichia coli septicemia and enteritis in a hyacinth macaw (Anodorhynchus hyacinthinus) was based on lesions such as generalized hyperemia and hemorrhages in visceral organs, fibrinonecrotic lesions in the intestine, and isolation of E coli in pure culture from the heart blood, liver, and intestine.

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