Radiographic and histological evidence of metabolic bone disease in gliding leaf frogs (Agalychnis spurrelli)

María Cristina Galante-Mulki, Yessenia Alvear-Santos, Ana Cecilia Santamaría-Naranjo, Andrés Merino-Viteri, Alexander Genoy-Puerto*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Bone alterations due to metabolic bone disease in captive animal populations can have a negative impact on repopulation and research initiatives. This investigation has the purpose of describing the principal radiographic and anatomopathological findings present in nine gliding leaf frogs (Agalychnis spurrelli) kept in captivity with alterations in their spines and long bones. The observed histopathological findings were in the canalis vertebralis, paraspinal muscle and long bones, and included deformed bones with alteration of the adjacent tissues, alterations in the ossification process, bone degeneration and resorption, decreased number of osteocytes and deposition of osteoid and fibrous material in the compact bone tissue. Additionally, the spinal cord showed compressed white matter, chronic meningitis in the duramater, alteration in the number of glial cells and loss of delimitation between the gray and white matter. Radiographical changes were found mainly in the long bones and included moth-eaten osteolysis, solid periosteal reaction, bone deformities, cortical tunneling and inflammation of adjacent soft tissues. Also, pathological fractures of the femur and urostyle were observed together with spinal column deviations with increased bone density.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere01432
JournalHeliyon
Volume5
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 5 Apr 2019

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019

Funding

This work was supported by the Directorate-General for Research of Universidad de Las Américas (UDLA), Ecuador (grant number VET. AG.17.04 ), and the General Academic Direction at Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador for funding resources through K13039 and L13039 research projects.

FundersFunder number
Universidad de las Américas - EcuadorAG.17.04
Pontifical Catholic University of EcuadorL13039, K13039

    Keywords

    • Anatomy
    • Ecology
    • Physiology
    • Zoology

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