Title: Common Problems in Laboratory Animals
 1Common Problems in Laboratory Animals
- Nirah H Shomer, DVM PhD Dip. ACLAM
2Barbering
- Normal grooming behavior 
- Usually, but not always, one unmarked barber 
- Barber is usually dominant 
- Usually harmless, but can precipitate 
 conjunctivitis, ulcerative dermatitis
Barber 
 3Periocular irritation (secondary to barbering) 
 4Fight Wounds
- Characteristic wound locations on fleeing mice 
- Tails, rear feet, genitals
5There is typically a dominant aggressive mouse
- Even if you remove the aggressor, another mouse 
 may take his place.
- Fights are almost exclusively between males 
- In some strains, even littermates raised together 
 will fight (BALB/c, SJL)
6Fight wounds (fatal)
- Mice may die, rapidly, of septicemia 
- Treat with broad spectrum antibiotics
7Ulcerative Dermatitis 
 8  9Skin lesions
-  Etiology Pattern Treatment 
- Barbering Normal grooming any (same all 
 mice) remove barber
- Fight Wounds Fighting tail, back, 
 genitals remove aggressor
- Ulcerative Dermatitis Unknown nape of neck, 
 none under arms ointments
-  pain drugs 
-  Linked to C57BL 2 infection 
 common antibiotics
10Emaciation
- Look for underlying cause 
- Report objectively using Body Condition Score
11These are littermates. What is the mouse on the 
right?
- Runt 
- What should you check for? 
12Malocclusion
- Rodent incisors grow continuously 
- Can be maintained by weekly clipping
13Malocclusion is heritable 
 14Diarrhea
- Mouse diarrhea is usually very subtle 
- All you see is bedding stuck to pellets and anus
15Rabbit feces
- Normal pellets Diarrhea 
- True or False diarrhea is normal in rabbits 
- False they do have night feces, cecotrophs, 
 which are usually eaten directly from the anus
16Hamster with wet tail
- Bacterial infection (Lawsonia intracellularis)- 
 proliferative ileitis
- Clostridial overgrowth (spontaneous, age- or 
 stress-related)
- Antibiotic toxicity (causes clostridial 
 overgrowth)
17Rectal Prolapse
- Rectum protrudes through anus 
- Associated with diarrhea, Helicobacter infection
18Seizures 
 19Dystocia(difficult birth)
- Dam neonate pup from last litter
20Whats wrong with this mouse? 
 21Inguinal Hernia
- Protrusion of an organ (e.g. gut) through a 
 natural opening (e.g. inguinal canal) or
 unnatural rent (e.g. diaphragmatic rupture) in a
 body wall.
- Note that this mass is reducible.
22Why is this rabbit matted?
  23Hunched Scruffy
- Non-specific sign indicating mouse is too ill to 
 groom itself.
24Tumor
- Size/dimensions 1.5x2.5x2.5cm 
- Shape irregular/lobulated 
- Location scapular/right flank 
- Color mottled 
- Texture firm/fluctuant 
- Ulceration ulcerated
25Zymbals Gland Tumor 
 26Circling
Head Tilt 
 27Porphyrin staining
- Pigment comes from Harderian glands 
- Increased in stress, respiratory disease, 
 sialodacryoadenitis virus (SDA) infection
- Prominent in rats and gerbils, not in mice 
- Found around eyes, nares, paws (from grooming 
 face)
28Conjunctivitis
- Inflammation of the conjunctival tissues aka 
 pink-eye. Usually bacterial, may not respond well
 to antibiotics.
29Proptosis
- Bulging or protruding eye 
- Causes include tumor, abscess, retroorbital 
 bleed/hematoma, glaucoma
- Secondary effects include keratitis, loss of eye
30Paralysis
- Theilers mouse encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV 
 strain GD VII)
- Spontaneous or iatrogenic trauma 
- Experimental Allergic Encephalitis (EAE) 
 (multiple sclerosis model)
31Find the barber
  32Pop Quiz 
 331. Whats wrong with these mice? 
 342. List all rule-outs for this condition 
 353. Describe this mouse 
 364. Which mouse should you remove from the cage, 
and why?
  375. Whats wrong with this rabbit? 
 386. What is wrong with this mouse? 
 397. Name the condition. 
 408. What is wrong with this rat? 
 411. Whats wrong with these mice?
  422. List rule-outs for this condition
- Fight wounds 
- Ectromelia (pox virus) 
- Footpad injection (swollen feet) 
- Tail bleeding/overheating (tail lesions)
433. Describe this mouse
- Emaciated 
- Also nude (but this is not a problem)
444. Which mouse should you remove from the cage, 
and why?
-  1 2 3 
 4
- These are fight wounds. Remove the aggressor. 
- Hint he is the one without lesions
455. Whats wrong with this rabbit?
  466. What is wrong with this mouse?
- Tumor. Most common tumor in this area? 
- Mammary tumor
477. Name the condition.
  488. What is wrong with this rat?
- Reddish discharge around eyes 
- What is this substance? 
- Porphyrin
49The End 
 50Whats wrong with this frog?
-  normal Xenopus 
- Severe emaciation 
- Skin lesions
51Whats wrong with this frog?
-  Emaciation 
- chronic kidney disease 
- Mycobacteria spp. chronic bacterial infection, 
 zoonotic
-  
52Skin lesions
- Pseudocapillaroides xenopi (nematode parasite)
53(No Transcript) 
 54Mastitis 
 55E. coli Mastitis in a ferret