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Case Report

Open Vet J. 2017; 7(4): 300-305


MULTIPLE MYELOMA IN AN AMUR TIGER (PANTHERA TIGRIS ALTAICA)

Alison Marie Lee, Naomi Guppy, John Bainbridge, Hanne Jahns.




Abstract
Cited by 2 Articles

The Amur tiger (Panthera tigris altaica) is an endangered tiger subspecies. An adult zoo-bred female was found collapsed, and died despite supportive treatment. Hematology and biochemistry showed pancytopenia and hyperglobulinemia, and serum protein electrophoresis revealed a monoclonal band in the β-globulin region. Necropsy demonstrated hemoabdomen, multifocal lytic bone marrow lesions, splenomegaly, and hemorrhagic hepatic nodules, with left medial lobe rupture. There were mutifocal hemorrhages in the subcutis, lung, epicardium, and intestinal mucosa. Histopathology demonstrated plasmacytoid cells infiltrating the bone marrow, liver and spleen, and circulating within blood vessels. On immunohistochemistry, cell infiltrates of the three tissues were positive for λ light chains, bone marrow infiltrates were positive for MUM-1 and bone marrow and spleen infiltrates were positive for CD20. These findings indicate that this animal died of hemoabdomen subsequent to multiple myeloma. This is the first time this disease has been reported in a tiger.

Key words: Amur tiger, immunohistochemistry, multiple myeloma, serum protein electrophoresis, Pantera tigris altaica






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