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Generalized Conditions
Tuberculosis and other Mycobacterial Infections
Tuberculosis in Marine Mammals
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Topics in Tuberculosis and other Mycobacterial Infections
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  • Tuberculosis in Nonhuman Primates
  • Tuberculosis in Captive Exotic Hoofed Animals
  • Tuberculosis in Marine Mammals
  • Mycobacterial Infections Other than Tuberculosis
 
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Tuberculosis in Marine Mammals

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M pinnipedii (a seal-adapted variant of M bovis) causes tuberculous lesions in fur seals and sea lions. The organism has been isolated from 4 species of fur seals and 2 species of sea lions in several countries as well as from some other animals. In seals, the organism causes lesions in the peripheral lymph nodes, spleen, peritoneum, and lungs. The presence of acid-fast organisms in the granulomatous lesions varies. Aerosols are considered the main route of transmission. Because of the zoonotic risk, precautions should be taken when handling these animals. (see Marine Mammals: Mycobacteriosis.)

Last full review/revision March 2012 by Charles O. Thoen, DVM, PhD

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