1. RENAL NEOPLASIA FROM A SINGLE POPULATION OF PTEROPODID BATS.
- Author
-
Flanders AJ, Farina LL, Szivek A, Fox-Alvarez WA, Donnelly K, Hamel PES, Giglio RF, Beatty SSK, Wellehan JFX, Crevasse SE, and Alexander AB
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Zoo, Florida, Kidney Neoplasms etiology, Kidney Neoplasms pathology, Male, Chiroptera, Kidney Neoplasms veterinary
- Abstract
Neoplastic diseases have rarely been reported in the family Pteropodidae, and primary malignant renal neoplasms are generally uncommon across animal species. This case series describes four cases of primary renal neoplasia: three renal cell carcinomas and one nephroblastoma in three species of pteropodid bats, specifically large flying foxes ( Pteropus vampyrus , n = 2), straw-colored fruit bat ( Eidolon helvum , n = 1), and a little golden-mantled flying fox ( Pteropus pumilus , n = 1). Two of the cases were diagnosed antemortem using ultrasonography, computed tomography, and cytology; and one of these bats with a renal cell carcinoma was treated successfully with a unilateral nephrectomy. The remaining two cases were diagnosed at necropsy.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF