GIT reptiles Flashcards
What are the main differences of a reptile to a dog that we need to take into account when undertaking a clinical exam?
- Thin abdominal muscles so you can palpate organs easily. Transillumination sometimes possible (geckos).
- Head and mouth examination very important.
- Faecal analysis is routine.
- Look for metabolic bone disease.
What is regurgitation in reptiles often associated with?
husbandry related
What are common GIT conditions in reptiles?
- Husbandry causes
- Bacterial e.g. mycoplasma
- Viral e.g. herpes, Inclusion Body Disease, adenovirus.
- Endoparasites e.g. oxyurids, ascarids and strongyles
- Protozoa e.g. cryptosporidium, coccidia, trichomonas
- Neoplasia
- Impactions/obstruction e.g. dehydration, foreign bodies
- Prolapses
What are husbandry causes of GIT conditions in reptiles?
- Inappropriate temperature (usually too cold/incorrect bulb type)
- Dehydration
- Inappropriate or excessive quantities of food
- Excessive handling after a meal (snakes)
- Ingestion of substrate and foreign material
- Overcrowding/mixing of species
- Poor hygiene
What parasite is this?
ascarid worm and egg
What parasite is this?
oxyurid worm and egg
What parasite is this an example of?
coccidia - isospora amphiboluri
How do the clinical signs differ with the location of cryptosporidium infection in reptiles??
- Protozoa affecting the stomach and small intestinal.
- When the stomach is infected it causes vomiting, weight loss, and hypertrophic gastritis.
- When the small intestine is infected it causes diarrhoea, passing undigested food and weight loss.
- Very infectious and progressive in snakes and lizards, and is difficult to treat.
- No effective treatment.
What GIT viruses affect reptiles? What clinical signs are associated?
Herpes virus:
* Virus often involve multiple body systems – (revise the case example from Y4 ‘Respiratory Disease in Small Mammals and Exotics Species)
* Clinical signs include necrotising stomatitis and enteritis.
Inclusion body disease:
* Arenavirus effecting snakes. Spread by ectoparasites (mites).
* Boas = Regurgitation, slow wasting and neurological signs
* Pythons = more rapid and acute death
Adenovirus:
Affects bearded dragons (usually juveniles). Causes anorexia, diarrhoea and wasting and neurological signs.
What is pathological hepatic lipidosis often secondary to in reptiles?
◦ Poor husbandry and diet
◦ Improper or lack of hibernation
◦ Bacterial infection
◦ Parasitism
◦ nutritional secondary hyperparathyroidism (NSHP)
◦ pre-ovulatory ovarian stasis (POOS)