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Gray wolf’s anatomy: Saving a species

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Francena is readied for the CAT scan, Thursday, April 19, 2012 in Brookfield, Illinois. Three of Brookfield Zoo's eight Mexican gray wolves were examined tip to tail by the veterinary staff and consultants for a study of the occurrence of nasal carcinoma in the wolves. The three four-year-old females had their eyes, teeth and blood examined and had CAT scans of their head. (Photo by Chuck Berman/Chicago Tribune/MCT)

CHICAGO (MCT) — It is not a scene you expect to witness: a wolf, out cold, immobilized, its feral snout inside the giant doughnut ring of a high-tech medical device.

It’s also striking purely on the level of language: a canine in a CAT scan. The Brookfield Zoo recently used the internal imaging technology common in human medicine to check its eight Mexican gray wolves for nose cancer.

One thing was clear: Whatever else is going on in American health care, these patients had a pretty good plan. Minimal wait times. Attentive staff. No discernible co-pay, unless an hour or so of unconsciousness counts.

Brookfield is leading, and publicizing, a study of the Mexican wolves — a smaller, endangered subspecies of the North American gray wolf — in hopes of determining potential causes of a higher-than-expected incidence of nasal carcinomas in the animals.

The Mexican wolf situation illustrates some of the potential complications of captive breeding plans. Their subspecies was nearly extinct in 1980, but seven captured animals have yielded a captive population now numbering 283, and another five dozen living in the wild in the Southwest. Such a small starting point has raised concerns about whether the genetic diversity is adequate.

“We are trying to understand what is the role the genetic links play, if any, in the nasal tumors,” said Dr. Carlos Sanchez, an associate veterinarian at Brookfield and a leader of the study. “Are we seeing more cancer in this animal because they are inbred, or not really?”

Brookfield’s Mexican gray wolves, 4-year-old female siblings who came to the zoo in 2010, were carried, unconscious, into the examining rooms in a big sling.

Carefully transferred to an examining table, they got more than just the CAT scan.

Taking the trouble to put them under means the staff seized the opportunity in late April to give them all full physicals, including blood work, heart and lung X-rays and a grooming treatment similar to what the wolves’ domestic cousins might receive at a dog salon: nails clipped, ears and teeth cleaned — everything but the cute haircut and jaunty bandanna tied around the neck at the end.

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