Publication | Closed Access
Veno-occlusive Disease of the Liver in Captive Cheetah
34
Citations
24
References
1988
Year
GastroenterologyPathologyAnatomyHepatic DisordersElectron MicroscopyHepatotoxicityParasitologyHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyLiver PhysiologyVeterinary PathologyHistopathologyLiverCaptive CheetahDevelopmental BiologyHepatologyPhysiologyVeterinary ScienceLiver DiseaseMetabolismMedicine
Liver tissues from 126 captive cheetah were evaluated by light microscopy and histochemistry; eight animals were evaluated by electron microscopy. The main hepatic lesion, a vascular lesion resembling veno-occlusive disease (VOD) of the liver and characterized by subendothelial fibrosis and proliferation of smooth muscle-like cells in the central veins, was seen in 60% of the sexually mature cheetah. Although this hepatic vascular lesion was seen in cheetah as young as 1 year of age, the most severe lesions, usually associated with liver failure, were found in cheetah between the ages of 6 and 11. There was no sex predisposition, and in approximately 40% of the VOD cases, liver disease was not suspected clinically or at necropsy. VOD was found in other felidae, especially in the snow leopard. High levels of vitamin A in livers, as well as in diets of the cheetah, could be a contributing factor in the development of VOD in some groups of cheetah.
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