Renal and Vaginal Calculi in a Free-Ranging Long-Beaked Common Dolphin (Delphinus capensis)
IAAAM 2018
Kerri Danil1; Sophie Dennison2; Michael M. Garner3; Judy St. Leger4; Elyse Wurster1,5*
1Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, La Jolla, CA, USA; 2TelVet Imaging Solutions, Oakton, VA, USA; 3Northwest ZooPath, Monroe, WA, USA; 4Sea World Parks and Entertainment, San Diego, CA, USA; 5Ocean Associates, Inc., Arlington, VA, USA

Abstract

Nephrolithiasis with vaginal calculus was identified in a stranded free-ranging long-beaked common dolphin (Delphinus capensis). Necropsy examination of the sexually mature D. capensis revealed multiple bilateral nephroliths and a 6.4 cm x 4.1 cm x 9.2 cm vaginal calculus weighing 182 g. Concurrently, the animal had a lytic and sclerotic lesion of the lumbar vertebrae with fusion of associated spinous processes. The extracted nephroliths ranged in size from 0.2 cm to 0.4 cm and were composed of 100% ammonium urate, which has been found in captive dolphin populations, while the vaginolith consisted of struvite and calcium carbonate. This disparity of composition suggests that the etiology of the two conditions was not directly related. No infectious agents were identified histologically or by calculi culture. Additionally, Morbillivirus PCR and Brucella PCR were negative, and biotoxin analysis and heavy metal concentrations were within normal limits. The vertebral lesion was considered incidental. The composition of the vaginolith suggests that bacterial vaginitis could have served as the predisposing condition. Staphylococcus sp. was isolated from the uterus, and Staphylococcus sp. producing urease has been associated with formation of struvite calculi.1 Although previously reported vaginoliths in common dolphins have been linked with fetal remains, this case is more similar to struvite vaginoliths reported in other species.2-6 Renal lesions included chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis with tubular degeneration and loss likely secondary to the presence of the nephroliths. The etiology of ammonium urate nephrolithiasis in managed care is linked to diet and age.7-9 If environmental changes cause a shift in prey species, the risk of nephrolithiasis in free-ranging cetaceans could increase. Careful surveillance for nephroliths in free-ranging populations should be considered by researchers.

Acknowledgements

Thank you Keiko Sherman, Holly Baijnuth, and Alexa Kownacki for assistance with the necropsy examination, and Katie Colegrove, David Gaspar, Tracey Goldstein, Kathi Lefebvre, Victoria Palmer, Sarena Sunico, and Lisa Ulrich for diagnostic services. Hill’s Pet Nutrition provided financial support for calculi composition analyses.

* Presenting author

Literature Cited

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7.  Smith CR, Venn-Watson S, Wells RS, Johnson SP, Maffeo N, Balmer BC, Jensen ED, Townsend FI, Sakhaee K. 2013. Comparison of nephrolithiasis prevalence in two bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) populations. Frontiers in Endocrinology. 4:145.

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9.  Ardente AJ, Wells RS, Smith CR, Walsh MT, Jensen ED, Schmitt TL, Colee J, Vagt BJ, Hill RC. 2017. Dietary cation-anion difference may explain why ammonium urate nephrolithiasis occurs more frequently in common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) under human care than in free-ranging common bottlenose dolphins. Journal of Animal Science. 95(3):1396–1406.

 

Speaker Information
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Elyse Wurster
Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
La Jolla, CA, USA


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