FERRET-SEARCH@LISTSERV.FERRETMAILINGLIST.ORG
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Date: | Sun, 15 Sep 1996 01:27:47 -0400 |
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To Stacy Schrier:
>We got him into a local vet which we have gone to once before and got a
>good impression. He kept him for tests and fluids during the day today.
>Tomorrow morning Grumpy is having his spleen removed. The vet also suspects
>a tumor, but, can't tel l until he goes inside. The vet's only concern is
>him awakening from the surgery.
Stacy:
If it'll help you sleep any easier - in over 95% of large spleens, there is
no evidence of a tumor. Most are just a proliferation of immature red and
white blood cells, usually due to inflammation somewhere else in the body.
In many cases, a common stomach infection by a bacteria called Helicobacter,
which almost every ferret has, is probably to blame.
But make sure he sends the spleen off to be checked by a pathologist,
someone who knows something about the diseases of the ferret....
Bruce Williams, DVM, DACVP Chief Pathologist, AccuPath
Dept. of Veterinary Pathology [log in to unmask]
Armed Forces Institute of Pathology
[log in to unmask]
[Posted in FML issue 1692]
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