| Literature DB >> 30943877 |
Natalia Jiménez-Zucchet1,2,3, Tamara Alejandro-Zayas1,2,3, Christian A Alvarado-Macedo1,2,3, María Renée Arreola-Illescas1,2,3, Lissette Benítez-Araiza1,2,3, Lilian Bustamante-Tello1,2,3, Danilo Cruz-Martínes1,2,3, Nayeli Falcón-Robles1,2,3, Luz Garduño-González1,2,3, María Concepción López-Romahn1,2,3, Ana Michelle Martínez-Taylor1,2,3, Adriana Mingramm-Murillo1,2,3, Carlos Ortíz1,2,3, Antonio L Rivera-Guzmán1,2,3, Rocío Sabater-Durán1,2,3, Angélica Sánchez-Jiménez1,2,3, Roberto Sánchez-Okrucky1,2,3, Lydia Staggs1,2,3, Raúl Torres-Salcedo1,2,3, María Vences-Fernández1,2,3, Bert Rivera-Marchand1,2,3, Antonio A Mignucci-Giannoni1,2,3.
Abstract
Urinalysis is a rapid, simple, inexpensive, and reliable test that documents urine abnormalities reflecting various types of renal, hormonal, or metabolic diseases. Urinalysis could assist proper monitoring of the health of dolphins under human care; however, normal baseline values for dolphin urinalysis have not been reported, to our knowledge. We sampled urine from 193 common bottlenose dolphins ( Tursiops truncatus), living under human care in 24 Caribbean dolphinariums, by voluntary free-catch and analyzed the urine for chemical and microscopic variables using multi-agent dry reagent chemistry dipstick test strips, dedicated pH reagent strips, and unstained sediment slides. Most urine was clear, pale yellow to dark yellow, and had a fishy odor. Dipstick glucose, bilirubin, ketones, and nitrites were negative in all dolphins. The urine pH was acidic ( x¯ ± SD; 5.88 ± 0.58) and specific gravity (SG) was 1.035 ± 0.008. Most animals had 0-2 red blood cells and white blood cells per 40× field, and were negative for proteins. On microscopic sediment, 42.7% of samples had few-to-many squamous epithelial cells; hyaline and epithelial casts were observed only rarely. Crystals were observed in 36.6% of the samples; most were calcium oxalate dihydrate (48.2%) and amorphous urates (42.4%). The values obtained in our study can be used as a reference for health monitoring of dolphins in dolphinariums, and to monitor renal conditions and function in dolphins being rehabilitated or under human care.Entities:
Keywords: Caribbean; dolphins; urinalysis; urine
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30943877 PMCID: PMC6838721 DOI: 10.1177/1040638719839110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vet Diagn Invest ISSN: 1040-6387 Impact factor: 1.279