| Summary Information |
| Diseases / List of
Physical / Traumatic Diseases / Disease summary |
| Alternative Names |
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| Disease Agents |
- Created deliberately for the "free dripping" method of
collecting bear bile, between the gall bladder and the abdominal wall,
by surgically opening the gall bladder and suturing it directly to the
abdominal wall, or by using the abdominal mesentery to create a tube
between the opened gall bladder and the abdominal wall. (P1.2002.w4)
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| Infectious
Agent(s) |
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| Non-infectious
Agent(s) |
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| Physical
Agent(s) |
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| General Description |
- Open fistula (sometimes more than one) between the bears' abdominal
skin and the gall bladder.
- Fistulas usually are infected.
- Note: Bears in which the fistula appears to have healed (as seen on
external examination) usually have internal abscesses and gall bladder pathology.
See: Gall Bladder Lesions in Bears
- An abdominal hernia is sometimes present.
(P1.2002.w4,V.w89)
Treatment
- Antibiotics to treat chronic infection around the site of the
fistula. (P1.2002.w4)
- Surgical removal of the gall bladder (cholecystectomy) and associated abscesses. (P1.2002.w4)
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| Further Information |
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| Associated Techniques |
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| Host taxa groups /species |
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