Struhsaker Thomas T, Angedakin Samuel, Landsmann Anja
Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
Makerere University Biological Field Station, PO Box 409, Fort Portal, Uganda.
Primates. 2019 Mar;60(2):109-112. doi: 10.1007/s10329-019-00715-2. Epub 2019 Jan 21.
We describe and document with digital images two adult male baboons (Papio anubis) from the Kibale National Park, Uganda who were infected with some kind of disease having clinical signs suggestive of Treponema pallidum. One of these males was missing his premaxilla, part of the maxilla, upper incisors, canines, and possibly the first premolars. The condition of his scrotum was not seen. The other adult male had prominent inflammation of his scrotum and, to a lesser extent, his penis. Otherwise, both males appeared normal and healthy and were apparently well integrated into the same social group. These observations suggest that an earlier report of an adult female baboon living in the same area who was missing her entire premaxilla and nose and most of her maxilla may have been suffering from a similar infection, rather than a congenital disorder, as previously speculated. If these lesions were due to T. pallidum infections, then this disease has a greater geographical distribution among non-human primates than previously known.
我们用数码图像描述并记录了来自乌干达基巴莱国家公园的两只成年雄性东非狒狒(埃及狒狒),它们感染了某种疾病,临床症状提示感染了梅毒螺旋体。其中一只雄性缺失了前颌骨、部分上颌骨、上门牙、犬齿以及可能的第一前磨牙。其阴囊状况未见描述。另一只成年雄性阴囊有明显炎症,阴茎也有较轻炎症。除此之外,两只雄性看起来都正常健康,显然很好地融入了同一个社会群体。这些观察结果表明,之前有一份关于生活在同一地区的成年雌性东非狒狒的报告,该雌性缺失了整个前颌骨和鼻子以及大部分上颌骨,可能是感染了类似疾病,而非如之前推测的先天性疾病。如果这些病变是由梅毒螺旋体感染引起的,那么这种疾病在非人类灵长类动物中的地理分布比之前所知的更广。