Velázquez-Wallraf Alicia, Fernández Antonio, Caballero Maria José, Møllerløkken Andreas, Jepson Paul D, Andrada Marisa, Bernaldo de Quirós Yara
Veterinary Histology and Pathology, Atlantic Center for Cetacean Research, University Institute of Animal Health and Food Safety (IUSA), Veterinary School, University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Canary Islands, Spain.
Faculty of Engineering, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NTNU, Trondheim, Norway.
Front Vet Sci. 2021 Jun 8;8:676499. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2021.676499. eCollection 2021.
Decompression sickness (DCS) is a widely known clinical syndrome in human medicine, mainly in divers, related to the formation of intravascular and extravascular gas bubbles. Gas embolism and decompression-like sickness have also been described in wild animals, such as cetaceans. It was hypothesized that adaptations to the marine environment protected them from DCS, but in 2003, decompression-like sickness was described for the first time in beaked whales, challenging this dogma. Since then, several episodes of mass strandings of beaked whales coincidental in time and space with naval maneuvers have been recorded and diagnosed with DCS. The diagnosis of human DCS is based on the presence of clinical symptoms and the detection of gas embolism by ultrasound, but in cetaceans, the diagnosis is limited to forensic investigations. For this reason, it is necessary to resort to experimental animal models to support the pathological diagnosis of DCS in cetaceans. The objective of this study is to validate the pathological results of cetaceans through an experimental rabbit model wherein a complete and detailed histopathological analysis was performed. Gross and histopathological results were very similar in the experimental animal model compared to stranded cetaceans with DCS, with the presence of gas embolism systemically distributed as well as emphysema and hemorrhages as primary lesions in different organs. The experimental data reinforces the pathological findings found in cetaceans with DCS as well as the hypothesis that individuality plays an essential role in DCS, as it has previously been proposed in animal models and human diving medicine.
减压病(DCS)是人类医学中一种广为人知的临床综合征,主要发生在潜水员身上,与血管内和血管外气泡的形成有关。在野生动物如鲸类中也有气体栓塞和类似减压病的描述。曾有人推测,对海洋环境的适应性使它们免受减压病的影响,但在2003年,首次在喙鲸身上描述了类似减压病的情况,对这一观点提出了挑战。从那时起,已经记录到几起喙鲸大规模搁浅事件,这些事件在时间和空间上与海军演习巧合,并被诊断为减压病。人类减压病的诊断基于临床症状的存在以及通过超声检测气体栓塞,但在鲸类中,诊断仅限于法医调查。因此,有必要借助实验动物模型来支持鲸类减压病的病理诊断。本研究的目的是通过一个实验兔模型来验证鲸类的病理结果,在该模型中进行了完整而详细的组织病理学分析。与患有减压病的搁浅鲸类相比,实验动物模型中的大体和组织病理学结果非常相似,存在全身分布的气体栓塞以及不同器官中的肺气肿和出血作为主要病变。实验数据强化了在患有减压病的鲸类中发现的病理结果,以及个性在减压病中起重要作用的假设,正如之前在动物模型和人类潜水医学中所提出的那样。