4.1 Article

Chronic mandibular osteomyelitis associated with a novel probable Kocuria sp in a sugar glider (Petaurus breviceps)

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JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PATHOLOGY
卷 206, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcpa.2023.08.006

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dental disease; Kocuria; osteomyelitis; Petaurus breviceps; sugar glider

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This study provides the first description of clinically significant pathology associated with Kocuria infection in a sugar glider. Histological examination revealed severe disruption of the mandible. Although Kocuria was isolated as a pure culture, it cannot be confirmed as the sole causal agent due to the chronicity of the case and potential for unculturable polymicrobial infections.
Dental disease in sugar gliders (Petaurus breviceps) is understudied, with only limited clinical and pathological data available. An approximately 7-year-old female sugar glider presented to its primary care veterinarian for a decline in food intake, rapid weight loss and a mass involving the rostral mandible. At necropsy, the mandibular mass effaced most of the rostral mandible and adjacent musculature. Histologically, the mandible was disrupted by nodular infiltrates of variably degenerate neutrophils and macrophages encased in granulomatous inflammation and fibrous connective tissue. Within the neutrophilic cell population were segments of fragmented, necrotic bone and cloud-like colonies of gram-positive cocci. Aerobic culture yielded a heavy, pure growth of a gram-positive coccus morphologically consistent with those identified in the lesions, which was identified as a presumptively novel Kocuria sp by polymerase chain reaction and sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. This is the first description of Kocuria infection in association with clinically significant pathology in an animal. Although isolated as a pure growth, Kocuria sp cannot be confirmed as the sole cause of lesion formation due to the case chronicity and potential for unculturable, polymicrobial infections. This report adds to our understanding of the clinical and pathological aspects of dental disease in sugar gliders. (c) 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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