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Loopy Squirrel
02-26-2009, 07:00 PM
Recently I had a squirrel that I had raised and released come home with a very unusual illness. When she first came home I noticed that she had difficulty moving her limbs. She had blisters on the heels of her back feet. Her paws were swollen ( all 4) and she was breathing heavily and had a very rapid heart beat. It almost looked as though her heart was beating out of her chest. I first suspected MBD because I have had in the past a squirrel that I had raised and released come home w/ it. It was confirmed w/ x-rays. This looked similar so I began treatment for MBD. I assummed that the breathing was due to pain. On the second day of treatment I noticed that she was becoming raspy so I started a course of baytril thinking that she was compromised and may have pneumonia setting in. She really did not show any inprovement by the end of the second day. I lost her on the third day. I still wasn't sure what I was dealing with at the time. About 2 days later I noticed that my seizure squirrel Oliver seemed a little listless. I wasn't overly concerned because he does get like this way sometimes. By the 4th day Oliver began the rapid breathing/heartbeat like the other squirrel. I realized that I had cross contaminated and passed this to Oliver assuming that the other squirrel had MBD. I was treating her and then w/out changing clothes I held and fed Oliver. I immediately took him up to the hospital and got a chest x-ray. It comfirmed what I had suspected, his lungs had congestion and his heart was enlarged. The vet feels that this is viral in nature but could have bacterial secondary infections. This "unknown" virus was listed in an old manual back in early 2000. The main symptom in their experience was the difficulty breathing. They used a course of Bactrim and the squirrels responded to it. This was the course I used with Oliver and he has recovered. In babies it can present itself with difficulty breating, rapid heartbeat, overall body pain (squirrel cannot get comfortable), possible vomiting. In adults it presents itself as MBD. The squirrel has the difficulty breathing and very rapid hearbeat, edema in paws, stiffness, painful to touch, uncoordinated, blisters on heels, & very reluctant to move. It can kill very fast. If it truely is encephalomyocarditis it is spread through urine & feces in rodents. However, many of the sites I found info on did not consider squirrels as a primary rodent host. This virus has been recovered in squirrels, cotton rats, and raccoons. It is very common in swine. No one really knows if this is truely viral or bacterial but it seems that antibiotics can be of some value. Please be on the look out especially if a squirrel comes in w/ rapid breathing/heartbeat.

foxsquirrels
02-26-2009, 07:11 PM
:goodpost :goodpost :goodpost :goodpost :goodpost

What great information LS!!!!!

PBluejay2
02-26-2009, 07:16 PM
Yes, thank you! Geez--there's so much to know!

Charles Chuckles
02-26-2009, 07:44 PM
:thankyou I am always learning here:thumbsup

FLUFFYTAILNUT
02-26-2009, 07:47 PM
Awww...what a poor baby....
You are such a good squirrel mom!
How are you??
Other than BUSY...of course??
Id love to see some new Rudy & Tater stuff...:poke:D

island rehabber
02-26-2009, 09:57 PM
I'm going to ask Squerly to create a Forum heading specifically for this ailment, so it's not lost in "Other". I believe this encephalomyocarditis may be part of the anaswer to that dreaded question: "Why do some squirrels suddenly die when they were perfectly healthy a day before?" Thank you Loopy for this excellent post.

Jackie in Tampa
02-27-2009, 04:26 AM
http://www.merckvetmanual.com/mvm/index.jsp?cfile=htm/bc/53600.htm

MsOakley
03-01-2009, 07:49 PM
It always impresses me when a released squirrel comes "home" and lets momma try to heal them. I've had it happen as well. I'm sorry it didn't help in this instance.