Todd R. Robeck, DVM; Leslie M. Dalton, DVM; W. Glen Young, BS
    
	
    
	A 40 day old 60 pound beluga calf was presented with signs of 
lethargy, inappetence, and an elevated respiratory rate on October 26, 1993. The animal had 
previously been placed on antibiotics, antifungals and administered purified beluga IgG due 
to similar clinical signs 5 days post-partum. At that time, it was determined that the 
calf's dam had mastitis and that her infection accounted for the calf's decrease in observed 
nursing. Once all clinical signs of mastitis had disappeared, the calf had begun to nurse 
normally and quickly put on 28 pounds. When clinical signs reappeared, cultures were taken 
(blood, deep nasal swab, blow plates, and rectal swab) and the animal was placed on enteral 
nutritional support. Hematology revealed regenerative anemia with nRBCs, degenerative left 
shift, elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR). Nasal swab cytology showed 
degenerative neutrophilic infiltrate. Ultrasonography yielded no significant findings. 
Antibiotics and antifungals were instituted at this time. The calf's condition continued to 
deteriorate as evidenced by increasing regenerative anemia, degenerative left shift, and 
increasing ESR On 1]/6/93 Ultrasonography revealed sever right thoracic pleural effusion 
with fibrin tags and a collapsed and consolated right lung. The left thoracic cavity had 
only mild evidence of pleural effusion and pleural thickening. No abdominal abnormalities 
were sonographically detected. Three liters of serosanginous fluid were drained from the 
right thoracic cavity. Antibiotics and steroid solution was infused back into the thoracic 
cavity. The fluid was analyzed and cultured. Gram positive filamentous rods were cultured 
and a tentative etiology of Nocardia spp was made. Supportive therapy continued until 
the animals' death on 11-14-93.
Histopathology and microbiology results revealed that the calf had a 
primary fulminating Nocardiosis pneumonia in the right lung which led to a pleuritis and 
eventual systemic infection of the organism to multiple organ sites.