FERRET-SEARCH@LISTSERV.FERRETMAILINGLIST.ORG
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Date: | Sun, 13 Aug 1995 21:33:41 -0700 |
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To Valerie Darling:
>My male, age six months, is very ill. Sunday 8/6 I found a puddle of blood,
>mixed with a clear, mucus-y liquid on our bathroom floor.
Valerie - the two most common problems which may result in strainng and
producing blood mixed with the stool are gastrointestinal foreign bodies
and proliferative colitis.
I always suspect a foeign body first in such a young ferret. They can
do a lot of damage as they pass through. Even the best ferret-proofed house
will yield a foreign body or two if the ferret is diligent enough. I would
suggest some radiographs, a barium series, and careful palpation to look for
this. And if the tests are negative, it still doesn't rule it out.
Proliferative colitis is a disease caused by a bacteria called
Desulfovibrio which is seen in young male ferrets. It is also characterized
by frequent small painful bloody stools. The only way to diagnose it is to
do a colonic biopsy. Your vet may want to try this, followed by several
weeks on Chloramphenicol, or until a negative pathology report comes back on
the sample.
Proliferative colitis is not really a totally curable disease, though.
Good management will lessen preiodic stress-related occurrences and give an
affected ferret a reasonably comfortable life.
Bruce Williams, DVM, DACVP
Dept. of Vet Path, AFIP
[log in to unmask] OR
Chief Pathologist, AccuPath
[log in to unmask]
[Posted in FML issue 1285]
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