Language Selection

Get healthy now with MedBeds!
Click here to book your session

Protect your whole family with Orgo-Life® Quantum MedBed Energy Technology® devices.

Advertising by Adpathway

         

 Advertising by Adpathway

The tiger who came for CT

1 month ago 11

PROTECT YOURSELF with Orgo-Life® QUANTUM TECHNOLOGY

Orgo-Life the new way to the future

  Advertising by Adpathway

5 hours ago

Debbie Tubby,Banham Zooand

Neve Gordon-Farleigh

Shaun Whitmore/BBC Mishka, an Amur tiger with orange and brown fur. It has its tongue sticking out of its mouth with a wire attached to it and it has a breathing tube.Shaun Whitmore/BBC

Vets scanned Mishka, the Amur tiger, for any bone and spinal changes

A CT (computed tomography) scanner has been used for the first time at a Norfolk zoo to give vets a clearer picture of its animals' complex or long-standing conditions.

Some residents of Banham Zoo, near Attleborough, including penguins, a vulture, a cheetah, a tiger and a sloth, were scanned using the equipment, which produces detailed images of bones, organs and soft tissue.

Ross Snipp, zoo director, said the zoo was excited to be using specialist equipment to check so many animals in one day.

"I have been doing this for a very long time, but these days don't come round a lot. It is a real privilege for me, as it is for the rest of the team," he said.

"What we really hope is to add to that pool of knowledge for each individual species.

"Not everyone gets a chance to do this. We are really fortunate. Anything we learn today we will share with our animal and veterinary colleagues around the world."

The scans were carried out with radiographers from Burgess Diagnostics, who said exotic animals made up just 3% of their clientele, compared with dogs comprising 90%.

Dr Elliott Simpson-Brown, a zoo vet with the International Zoo Veterinary Group, said being able to bring the CT scanner to the zoo meant the checks could be carried out in a safe and controlled environment.

Shaun Whitmore/BBC Arlo, a sloth with brown fur lying on its back on a mat on a CT scanner. The sloth has its mouth open and arms in the air.
Shaun Whitmore/BBC

Shaun Whitmore/BBC Mishka, an Amur tiger with orange and brown fur. It has its tongue sticking out of its mouth with a wire attached to it and it has a breathing tube.Shaun Whitmore/BBC


Keepers have raised concerns about Arlo the sloth being lethargic

Vets scanned Mishka, the Amur tiger, for any bone and spinal changes

Mishka the Amur tiger was sedated in her habitat and transported to the scanner, where vets were looking for any bone and spinal changes.

"The keepers are looking after her really well," said Simpson-Brown.

"She's actually currently really comfortable, so we are using this as the gold standard re-check to be able to ensure we are not missing anything else going on there."

He said work with animals in captivity had a "ripple effect" for big cats in the wild and treatment protocols.

The CT scanner enabled any underlying health issues to be ruled out quickly and non-invasively, he added.

Bob, a one-eyed African black-footed penguin, and Grub, a meerkat, were also scanned, along with a sloth named Arlo.

Keepers had raised concerns that Arlo seemed particularly lethargic, even by sloth standards.

"Looking at a sloth and trying to determine if they are lethargic or not cannot be the easiest," said Simpson-Brown.

"Luckily the keepers here are incredibly diligent, so they are noticing the subtle changes in an animal."

Do you have a story suggestion for Norfolk? Contact us below.

Read Entire Article

         

        

Start the new Vibrations with a Medbed Franchise today!  

Protect your whole family with Quantum Orgo-Life® devices

  Advertising by Adpathway