Affiliation:
1. Department of Veterinary Medicine University of Cambridge Cambridge UK
2. Mildmay Veterinary Hospital Winchester UK
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundThere is a relative paucity of data examining the prevalence of renal pathology in wild rabbits.MethodsSixty‐two wild rabbits that had been shot for population control in Cambridgeshire, UK, underwent postmortem examination, including macroscopic and microscopic renal assessment.ResultsThe majority (82%) of the animals had macroscopically and microscopically normal kidneys. One animal (1.6%) had severe perirenal abscessation. Pasteurella spp. was isolated from this lesion. Ten rabbits (16%) had microscopic renal pathology comprising minimal to mild renal inflammation or fibrosis. No Encephalitozoon cuniculi organisms were detected histologically.LimitationsThe sample population was composed of shot rabbits, so the probability of detecting moribund individuals was reduced. Extrapolation of these data to the wider UK wild rabbit population may be limited as rabbits were shot at two sites within a 3 km radius of each other.ConclusionRenal pathology is rare in the population examined.
Subject
General Veterinary,General Medicine
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. Endoparasites of rabbits and hares;Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation;2024-08-06