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| + | ==Neurological diseases of the skin, cutaneous hyperaesthesia== |
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| + | A hyperaesthetic (apparently pruritic) skin disorder that resulted in severe |
| + | self-trauma has been reported. The donkey sustained a fracture of a cervical |
| + | vertebra and the associated dermal segment showed persistent sweating |
| + | and remained a constant irritation to the donkey. The area was traumatised |
| + | persistently, but topical local anaesthetics had no material effect. |
| + | |
| + | ===[[Rabies - Donkey|Rabies]]=== |
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| + | Donkeys are liable to rabies like all other major mammals, and affected |
| + | animals may show severe (central/paradoxical) pruritus. The patient will |
| + | bite, lick and rub at the site of the original inoculation. Usually there is a |
| + | history of a bite at the site and so clinicians MUST always ask before they |
| + | examine a donkey in an endemic area that shows a focal, severe, progressive |
| + | pruritus. Usually the course of the condition is rapid and so a diagnosis may |
| + | be assumed or confirmed from the clinical and supportive tests. |
| + | |
| + | ==References== |
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| + | * Knottenbelt, D. (2008) Skin disorders In Svendsen, E.D., Duncan, J. and Hadrill, D. (2008) ''The Professional Handbook of the Donkey'', 4th edition, Whittet Books, Chapter 8 |
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