Animals (May 2024)

A Case of Severe Abomasal Sand Impaction in a Farmed White-Tailed Deer (<i>Odocoileus virginianus</i>) in Florida

  • Alireza Rahmani Shahraki,
  • João H. J. Bittar,
  • Samantha M. Wisely,
  • Juan M. Campos-Krauer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14111602
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 11
p. 1602

Abstract

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The University of Florida’s Cervidae Health Research Initiative (CHeRI) conducted a post-mortem examination of a two-year-old white-tailed doe deceased at a northern Florida white-tailed deer farm. The carcass of the deer had notable emaciation and bloating. Upon opening of the carcass, there was pneumonia and the rumen was tympanic and enlarged. Additionally, the abomasum was distended and contained approximately 5 kg of sand. It is not uncommon for white-tailed deer to engage in geophagia (eating soil or sand), which typically does not result in diseases or fatalities. However, in this animal, we suspect a chronic process that created a physical barrier, hindering nutrient absorption and resulting in physical irritation of the abomasal mucosa with subsequent inflammation. This may have caused a disturbance in immune system function, allowing opportunistic bacteria to colonize and invade other organs, such as the lungs, contributing to the animal’s death.

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