Observations on an outbreak of nutritional steatitis (yellow fat disease) in fitch (Mustella putorius furo).

N Z Vet J

Palmerston North Animal Health Laboratory, PO Box 1654, Palmerston North, New Zealand.

Published: September 1985

AI Article Synopsis

  • An outbreak of nutritional steatitis in farmed fitch was linked to high dietary levels of polyunsaturated fat, particularly from squid, affecting mostly young kits aged 13 to 15 weeks, leading to 183 deaths out of 793 affected.
  • The disease was mitigated by reducing polyunsaturated fat intake and increasing vitamin E supplementation, which had been insufficient in the original diet.
  • Affected fitch exhibited severe steatitis characterized by inflamed adipose tissue, microcytic anemia, and changes in liver iron levels, but no skeletal or cardiac myopathy was observed.

Article Abstract

An outbreak of nutritional steatitis in farmed fitch (Mustella putorius furo) caused by feeding high levels of dietary polyunsaturated fat was investigated. The disease affected mainly 13 to 15 week rapidly growing kits; 793 kits were affected and 183 died. The outbreak was quickly controlled by lowering the level of polyunsaturated fat in the diet and administering high doses of vitamin E. Affected animals had severe generalised steatitis characterised grossly by yellow brown granular fat, which histologically consisted of diffusely necrotic adipose tissue heavily infiltrated with macrophages and neutrophils. There were extensive deposits of PAS-positive, fluorescent lipopigment within macrophages and extracellularly throughout the inflamed fat. Affected fitch had normochromic microcytic anaemia, lowered liver iron levels, increased thrombocytes and acute inflammatory leucograms. Skeletal or cardiac myopathy was not observed grossly or histologically in any of the animals examined. The diet contained high levels of polyunsaturated fat (7.7%DM), a high proportion being docosahexaenoic and eicosapentaenoic acids which were derived from the squid component (40%) of the ration. The livers from affected fitch contained correspondingly high levels of polyunsaturated fatty acids. The diet provided 13 mg Vitamin E per fitch daily, which was clearly inadequate considering the high levels of polyunsaturated fat being fed. Liver selenium levels were extremely high as a result of the high selenium levels in the squid portion of the diet.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00480169.1985.35199DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

high levels
16
polyunsaturated fat
16
levels polyunsaturated
12
outbreak nutritional
8
nutritional steatitis
8
fitch mustella
8
mustella putorius
8
putorius furo
8
high
8
selenium levels
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!