Title: Careers in Veterinary Medicine: Primate Medicine
1Careers in Veterinary Medicine Primate Medicine
Gwendolyn Maginnis, DVM
2How I ended up in Primate Medicine
- University of California, Davis
- California Regional Primate Research Center
- Veterinary Technician
- Senior Externships
- Los Angeles Zoo
- Woodland Park Zoo
3 Jobs in Primate Medicine
- National Primate Research Center Program
- Universities
- Contract Research Organizations
- Import Facilities and Commercial Breeding
Colonies - Military
4California National Primate Research Center
5Oregon National Primate Research Center
6Working with Monkeys
7Monkeys at ONPRC
- Population 4,255 nonhuman primates
- Rhesus macaques (3,787)?
- Japanese macaques (330)?
- Cynomolgus macaques (113)?
- Baboons (14)?
- Vervets (11)?
8Primate Taxonomy
9NHP Housing
Over half of the monkeys at ONPRC live in social
groups
10Sheltered Small Group Housing
11Caged Housing
12Macaque Zoonotic Concerns
- Viral
- Cercopithecine Herpesvirus-1 (a.k.a. Herpes B
Virus)? - Bacterial
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Campylobacter spp.
- Giardia
- Shigella
13Herpes B Virus
- Common pathogen in monkeys of the genus Macaca.
Similar to herpes simplex in humans - 1-3 of infected macaques shed virus at any given
time and will likely not have any evidence of
disease. - Causes a rare but potentially fatal rapid
ascending paralysis in humans - Transmission via inoculation with potentially
infected body fluids and tissues (bite, scratch,
needle stick, eye splash, etc)?
14Working Safely with Macaques
- Personal Protective Equipment
- Overgarment to cover street clothes, uniforms, or
scrub suits - Face mask
- Nitrile gloves and/or similar gloves
- Eye protection- safety glasses or face shield ?
- Animals are typically sedated for all exams and
treatments - Ketamine HCl 10mg/kg
15Macaque Zoonotic Concerns
- Viral
- Cercopithecine Herpesvirus-1 (a.k.a. Herpes B
Virus)? - Bacterial
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Campylobacter spp.
- Giardia
- Shigella
16Tuberculosis
- Old world primates are exquisitely susceptible to
TB - Current treatments are not 100 effective at
eliminating the bacteria from the body - Current vaccines are not 100 effective at
providing protection against TB - TB surveillance and elimination of any positive
animals is the primary means for protecting the
colony
17Tuberculosis Surveillance Programs
- Regular testing of established monkey population
- Quarterly or biannually
- Regular testing of all human personnel
- Biannually or annually
- Quarantine and frequent testing of new animals
- Every other week for up to 5 negative tests
18Tuberculosis Skin Test (TST)?
- The test is performed in the eyelid to facilitate
easy and accurate reading without sedation. - Test agent is Mammalian Old Tuberculin (M.O.T.)?
- The injection should be given in the middle of
the eyelid, just above the eyelashes. - A successful intradermal injection will result in
a bleb, or a raised blister-like structure, on
the eyelid.
19TB Test evaluation
- The test site is to be checked by trained
personnel at 24, 48, and 72 hours after
injection. - The eyelid is evaluated for redness, bruising, or
swelling. - Reactions are graded on a scale of 1-5 depending
on severity
20Veterinary Care Program
21What are the responsibilities of a primate
veterinarian?
- Clinical care
- Ensure health and well-being of colony of over
4,000 NHPs - Preventive care
- Weight watchers
- Geriatrics
- Annual physicals
- Quarantine
- Research Support
22What are the responsibilities of a primate
veterinarian?
- Administrative
- Hiring and managing veterinary personnel
- Hospital management
- Oversight of husbandry program
- Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee
- Teaching
- Technicians
- Veterinary students
23Veterinary Care Program
- Indoor animals
- Daily observation
- Morning health report
- Open clinical case
- Technician triage
- Veterinary assessment
- Follow-up
24Veterinary Care Program
- Outdoor animals
- Daily observation
- Sick animals are brought in to the hospital
- Veterinary evaluation
- Emergency and critical care
- Physical Exam
- Bloodwork
- IV fluid therapy
- Wound management
- Hospitalization for on-going care
- Evaluate for release
25Common Clinical Problems in Monkeys
- Infectious Diarrhea
- 50-60 Clinical Caseload
- Endemic pathogens poor hygiene
- Bacteria
- Parasites
- Fluid Therapy
- Dehydration with electrolyte
- loss
- Rate 30ml/kg/hr for 3 hours
- Restraint
- Zoonotic
26Campylobacter
- Campylobacter jejuni, Campylobacter coli
- C. coli is only clinically significant in infants
and juveniles - Microaerophilic
- Special culture requirements
- Heat-labile, cholera-like toxin
- Symptoms
- Diarrhea, dysentery
- Abdominal cramping
- Dehydration
27Shigella
- Shigella flexneri
- Closely related to Escherichia coli and
Salmonella - Produces Shiga toxin
- Clinical signs
- Severe dysenteric diarrhea
- Severe abdominal cramping
- Nausea
- Fever
- Dehydration
28Giardia
- Giardia lamblia
- Flagellated, cyst-forming protozoan parasite
- Symptoms
- Copious watery diarrhea
- Excessive GI gas
29Balantidium
- Balantidium coli
- Cyst-forming ciliated protozoan
- Symptoms
- Diarrhea
- Chronic infections occasionally seen with immune
supression - NHP
30Trichuris
- Trichuris trichiura
- Human whipworm
- Symptoms
- Typically asymptomatic
- Occasional diarrhea
- Treatment
- Fenbendazole, Pyrantel pamoate
31Clinical Problems contd
- Trauma
- Typically associated with social housing
- 30-40 of Clinical Caseload
- Common Wounds
- Lacerations (K-9)?
- Digit Fractures
- Tail base deglove
- Hip flap wound
32Special Considerations for Wound Management in
Monkeys
- Opposable thumbs
- Skilled at suture removal
- More bandaging
- Skilled at bandage removal
- Heavy duty bandaging, no padding or gauze exposed
- Social Considerations
- Desire to return patient to social group ASAP
- May dictate suturing when healing by second
intention is otherwise indicated
33Rhabdomyolysis
- Severe trauma with significant
- crush injury
- Myoglobin is released from
- damaged muscle cells
- Myoglobin will precipitate out in the kidneys
under acidic conditions - Tubular blockage and back pressure
- Direct effect on renal tubular cells
- Renal failure due to renal tubular necrosis is a
likely sequela if appropriate IV fluid therapy is
not given
34Rhabdomyolysis- management
- IV fluid therapy
- Crystalloids
- Hypertonic saline
- Sodium bicarbonate
- Diuresis
- Analgesia
- Wound management
- Antimicrobial therapy
- Nutritional support
35Clinical Problems in Monkeys
- Reproduction
- Endometriosis
- Dystocia
- Rhesus typically
- give birth at night
- Neonatal care
- Orphans
- Ill thrift
36Clinical Problems contd
- Geriatrics
- Amyloidosis
- GI, liver, kidney
- Intestinal Adenocarcinoma
- Spinal Abnormalities
- Kyphosis
- Degenerative joint disease
- Type II Diabetes
37Primate Medicine as a Career Pros
- Resources to practice the best medicine
- In high demand
- Competitive salary and benefits
- Animals are on-site
- Access for treatment and follow-up
- Working with sedated patients
- The research is always presenting new challenges
to the clinician and helps keep skill at the
cutting edge - Opportunity to pursue professional/research
interests
38Primate Medicine as a Career Cons
- Controversial
- Working with caged animals on research projects
- Zoonotic Concerns
39More information. . .
- Primate Information Network
- pin.primate.wisc.edu
- Association of Primate Veterinarians
- www.primatevets.org
- American College of Laboratory Animal Medicine
- www.aclam.org
- www.aclam.org/print/externships_list_2007-02.pdf
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