Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2438506 | Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2009 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
SummaryA retrospective pathological study of 118 rabbits presenting with neurological disease was conducted. Diagnoses were categorized on the basis of aetiopathogenesis as inflammatory, vascular, traumatic, metabolic-toxic, neoplastic, degenerative or idiopathic. Central nervous system (CNS) lesions were present in 85 (72.0%) of the rabbits and in most of these cases (70.3%) a causative agent was identified. The majority of animals (n = 78, 66.1%) had disease of an inflammatory nature and 71 of these 78 rabbits had one of two zoonotic infectious diseases: encephalitozoonosis (n = 69, 58.5%) and herpes simplex virus (HSV) encephalitis (n = 2). Infections with zoonotic potential are therefore a major cause of CNS disease in the rabbit.
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Authors
A. Gruber, A. Pakozdy, H. Weissenböck, J. Csokai, F. Künzel,