Thursday 24 April 2014

APRIL 2014: POSTMORTEM REPORT OF A MALE OSTRICH IN POA PLACE-ELDORET

By Dr. E. Ndambiri.

Background Information

The male Ostrich was eleven years old. It had been originated from Ostrich farm in Nairobi and transported to Poa Place a year ago. It was in company of other two females at Poa Place. It was noted to be off feed as from around mid-March. It was put under sulphur based antibiotics for seven days and glucose. At the beginning of April it was on normal diet again and in the early hours of 6/4/2014 it was discovered to have died despite being noted normal the previous evening. A postmortem was conducted on the same day to determine the cause of death.

Important Postmortem Findings

1. It died while on right lateral recumbence. Carcass was generally emaciated with pale mucus membranes and whole carcass was whitish. No physical injury was noted. No nasal or mouth discharges except little urate from cloaca.

2. On opening the abdominal cavity there was a gangrenous material about 30 grams between the viscera surface of jejunum and the abdominal wall ventrally. The whole of jejunum was highly congested and at the location of gangrenous material was a perforation on the jejunum at a location which was doughy textural-wise depicting abnormal entanglement. The fenestra was oozing reddish discharge accounting for the copious bloody peritoneal fluid found within the abdominal cavity. There was fibrin attached on some of jejunum loops and also at the area around the cloaca on abdominal cavity. The jejunal mesenteric blood vessels were easily appreciated /visualized. The liver was seemingly normal though with necrotic fibrin adhesions at one edge.

3. The chest cavity depicted pale whitish surfaces of the organs and more so of the heart. The heart was collapsed with no blood in any chamber. Lungs were paler than normal and hardly were pleural or pericardial fluids.

4. The proventriculus and the glandular stomach were engorged with ingesta at different stages of digestion. Only a small portion of ingesta in latter was slightly bloody. On mucosal surface of the jejunum pre- and post- entangled location was severely hyperemic and had bloody intestinal loose contents. The daffy entanglement with perforation was cut open. It contained thick streaks of clotted blood and traces of rotten hardened fibrous grass-like material mixed with clotted blood. Within the entanglement was invagination of jejunum loops with some (intussuscipiens) showing fresh visceral surface and others (intussusceptum) necrotic and gangrenous mucosal surfaces. The most anterior and distal intestines had dark green-black contents mixed with gas with latter having mucoid streaks


Pictorial Presentation

Dead ostrich carcass

 Pale mucus membranes

 Rib prominences

 Gangrenous material

Congested jejunum loops anterior to entanglement


Collapsed heart

 Liver necrotic edge

Point of jejunal entanglement

Mucosal surface of pre- and post- entanglement location


Entanglement mucosal surface

Entanglement visceral surface

Ingesta in glandular & proventriculus

Clotted blood streaks 


Discussion

The entanglement appeared to be a jejuno-jejunal intussusception and is hereby considered as so.  Causes of most intussusception are speculative at best, alterations in peristalsis due to enteritis, surgical trauma, parasite damage, anthelmintics, and Anaplocephala perfoliata infection have been suggested. The condition as depicted by pathological changes must have taken time to develop more than two weeks probably and the intestinal obstruction grew from partial to total with time. Due to progressive edema and hemorrhage of intussusceptum the damage results to development of adhesions. Intervention is required early where surgery is aimed to reduce intussusception followed by possible resection and anastomosis.


Conclusion
The bird died out of circulatory shock due to gangrene of the bowel secondary to intussusception.


Acknowledgement
Assistance accorded during this exercise is hereby appreciated. The ARR, the management of Brigadier Boinet Foundation and KWS at large.

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