E.J. Noga; H.A. Berkhoff
    
	
    
	An ulcerative skin disease which is very similar clinically to that 
reported in Japanese eel (A. japonica) has caused morbidity in both wild and captive 
populations of American eel (Anguilla rostrata) in North Carolina, USA. Lesions appear 
to begin as localized, depigmented foci which spread to form large patches of necrotic skin up 
to 1600 mm2 in area. The depigmented patches detach at the dermo-epidermal junction, forming 
large ulcers that expose underlying muscle. The infection commonly affects the head, producing 
cranial swelling and corneal edema.
A mild to severe, primarily mononuclear infiltrate is seen, most 
prominently in large ulcers. Many lesions had extensive collagen deposition, which contributed 
to the tissue swelling. Culture of skin lesions in various stages of development revealed the 
consistent presence of bacterial isolates that were biochemically and immunologically 
identified as Aeromonas salmonicida. This agent was the predominant organism by colony 
type in 17 of 20 skin cultures and usually appeared to constitute over 90% of the colonies 
present. Kidney samples were free of infection.