TY - JOUR
T1 - Sudden death in a captive meerkat (Suricata suricatta) with arterial medial and myocardial calcification
AU - Bongiovann, Laura
AU - Di Girolamo, Nicola
AU - Della Salda, Leonardo
AU - Massimi, Marcella
AU - Romanucci, Mariarita
AU - Selleri, Paolo
PY - 2016/4/1
Y1 - 2016/4/1
N2 - A 1-year-old male meerkat was found dead by the owner. The animal was clinically healthy and was regularly vaccinated for distemper virus. Necropsy revealed multifocal to confluent dry white areas in the myocardium, pneumonia and congestive hepatopathy. All the other organs, including gross vessels, were macroscopically normal. The heart showed histologically large, multifocal to confluent areas of mineralization of the myocardium and the wall of small coronary artery. Vascular calcifications were also observed in the hepatic portal tracts and kidneys arteries of small/medium sizes. The arterial lumen appeared narrowed and the wall thickened due to the calcification of the tunica media. In veterinary medicine, arterial mineralization is regarded as a metastatic calcification, as the result of hypercalcemia and/or hyperphosphatemia. However, today, the pathogenesis of medial artery calcification in humans seems to be the results of an active process resembling embryonic osteogenesis, rather than a mere passive process.
AB - A 1-year-old male meerkat was found dead by the owner. The animal was clinically healthy and was regularly vaccinated for distemper virus. Necropsy revealed multifocal to confluent dry white areas in the myocardium, pneumonia and congestive hepatopathy. All the other organs, including gross vessels, were macroscopically normal. The heart showed histologically large, multifocal to confluent areas of mineralization of the myocardium and the wall of small coronary artery. Vascular calcifications were also observed in the hepatic portal tracts and kidneys arteries of small/medium sizes. The arterial lumen appeared narrowed and the wall thickened due to the calcification of the tunica media. In veterinary medicine, arterial mineralization is regarded as a metastatic calcification, as the result of hypercalcemia and/or hyperphosphatemia. However, today, the pathogenesis of medial artery calcification in humans seems to be the results of an active process resembling embryonic osteogenesis, rather than a mere passive process.
KW - Arterial calcification
KW - Meerkat
KW - Myocardial calcification
KW - Suricata suricatta
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84960410836&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.apjtb.2016.01.009
DO - 10.1016/j.apjtb.2016.01.009
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84960410836
SN - 2221-1691
VL - 6
SP - 357
EP - 359
JO - Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine
JF - Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine
IS - 4
ER -