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Authors: Lucy H Spelman

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This is a part of our emergency response plan I hope never to see implemented during my career. But like all zoos, we have policies in place to ensure human as well as animal safety. I briefed the group on the potential dangers involved. We needed to take every precaution and work together as a team.

Pushing the possibility of disaster out of my mind, I picked up my darting kit and walked down the hall to the den. As I approached the cage, Aussie finally sat down and let me have a good look at his belly. About five years earlier, the polar bear had developed a golf-ball–sized fatty swelling at his navel, a small umbilical hernia that was hard to see even in strong light. It hadn't changed in years, nor had it caused Aussie any discomfort—until today. Now the hernia was impossible to miss. The area was hugely swollen.

When we first noticed the hernia, we'd anesthetized Aussie for ultrasound examination and physical palpation to confirm our diagnosis. The cause of this problem is usually a small amount of fatty tissue caught in the area around the umbilical cord (belly button) at birth, creating a small opening in the muscles in the middle of the abdominal wall. If this hole enlarges over time, organs like the intestines can follow.

Many small umbilical hernias never change during the life of the patient, so they are monitored rather than removed surgically unless the animal shows signs of pain or the swelling changes in size. If this happens, the chances are that more than fat is wedged in the area. It can be a life-threatening condition, particularly when it happens acutely.

Usually, by this time in the morning, Aussie would be banging on the door to be given access to his outside exhibit and pool. Today he had no such interest. He was vocalizing and panting at the front of his cage. I darted Aussie with a combination of anesthetic agents (medetomidine and tiletamine-zolazepam) in his right front shoulder. He hardly reacted, probably distracted by the discomfort from his hernia. Within about fifteen minutes, the polar bear lay on his side, eyes partially closed, breathing deeply.

It was my responsibility to make sure that Aussie was really asleep and that he would stay that way until we could hook him up to gas anesthesia for surgery. One of the assets of bear dens is their solid, bunkerlike construction, which helps them maintain comfortable constant temperatures for the animals. But that construction also means the doorways are small, requiring humans to bend down and negotiate a large cement step to get in and out. I crawled into the den slowly,
hoping to find a deeply anesthetized polar bear while also contemplating my what-if plan.

Fortunately, the anesthetic drugs had done their job. With the help of about twenty keepers, I was able to roll Aussie onto a cargo net, lift him through the narrow doorway (no easy feat), and heave him onto a wooden pallet. Aussie was so large that his head and legs still hung over all sides of the polar-bear–sized stretcher we had constructed earlier that day. The forklift slowly picked him up and backed down the long, dimly lit access hall to where a flatbed truck awaited us. Though security staff had roped off our immediate work area, a large crowd of spectators had gathered, recognizing that something out of the ordinary was transpiring.

For the ride through the zoo grounds, I climbed up onto the flatbed to monitor the bear's anesthesia. The flatbed was a narrow space with low wooden sidewalls, barely wide enough for both of us. Wedged between the wet, smelly bear and the wall, I felt a rush of adrenaline when Aussie voluntarily moved one of his huge paws. It had only been a short time since I'd darted him. Maybe he wasn't as deeply asleep as I'd thought? I gave him an additional amount of anesthetic intravenously using a vein in his rear leg. Thankfully, it worked quickly. A few minutes later, we were ready to begin our trip from the bear dens to the vet hospital.

Our zoo is a beautifully planted park with winding pathways leading from one animal exhibit to another—but no back access road. We had no choice but to drive right through the park, slowly. Zoo police cleared the way as we drove. A crowd of several hundred people watched as we wound our way from the bear exhibit to Roosevelt Fountain, past the
back side of Tropic World, and finally off the grounds and out of sight. Our supersized patient slept through it all.

At the hospital, we inserted a breathing tube normally used for fifteen-hundred-pound horses into Aussie's airway so that we could administer gas anesthesia during the surgery. We placed intravenous catheters attached to fluid lines in order to administer preoperative antibiotics, fluids, and pain medication. The polar bear's entire belly was shaved and scrubbed with antiseptic solution, revealing the black skin under his white fur—normal for polar bears. We rolled him into surgery and positioned him on his back with all four legs and neck extended. Earlier, I'd asked carpenters to reinforce the surgery table so it could handle Aussie's unusual weight and size, and to my relief the emergency modifications held.

Soon a great many blue surgical drapes covered all of Aussie's body except the area of the distended hernia. The specialists from the veterinary school went right to work. Dr. Rachael Carpenter helped monitor anesthesia while Dr. Chris Byron got started on the surgery. He began with an incision in front of the hernia in order to feel inside Aussie's abdomen to see if there were intestines or a piece of the spleen or other organ trapped within the swelling. If this was the case, a longer and more difficult surgery would be required, and Aussie's health would be at greater risk.

The danger is that when these tissues squeeze through the small hernia opening, their blood supply can be compromised; this can result in death of the tissue and severe infection in a patient, particularly when loops of intestine are involved. Sometimes the damaged intestine must also be removed,
a surgery known as a bowel resection. Fortunately, this was not the case. The herniated tissue consisted only of fat. The object of the surgery was relatively simple: expose the hole in the muscle, remove the herniated fat, and suture the rent in the abdominal wall so it never splits open again.

To access the area, Dr. Byron incised the skin in an elliptical fashion on both sides of the hernia using electrocautery to control any bleeding. Over the next hour, he removed several pounds of traumatized skin and subcutaneous tissue from the hernia site, as well as a large amount of necrotic (dead) fat. The actual defect through which the abdominal fat had squeezed to form the swelling was surprisingly small, only about four inches long. Once the edges of the hernia had been sutured to close the hole, the site was lavaged with saline. Then the surgeon closed the subcutaneous fat and tissue in three separate layers, a technique designed to hold the weight of Aussie's heavy belly when he stood up. Finally, the skin was closed with absorbable stitches to spare us from having to remove them at a later date.

We moved our patient back to his den at around seven
pm
in the same way he'd been brought to the hospital. Though the logistics were easier this time and the commute much quicker, the drive back was still a bit scary: by now it was dark, requiring us to monitor the bear's anesthesia with flashlights. Back in the den, I stayed with Aussie until he woke up, acutely aware that I was once again jammed in a small space—about the size of my bathroom—with one of North America's largest and most dangerous carnivores. Fortunately, Aussie woke up slowly and quietly, a smooth recovery that gave me plenty of time to exit safely. Tired and filthy, I
got to my feet, heaved a sigh of relief, and thanked everyone for their extraordinary efforts. All the planning and preparation had paid off.

I hoped Aussie would feel a whole lot better soon. But the next morning, the polar bear refused to eat, drink, and take his medicine. We'd prescribed oral pain medication and antibiotics. He paced and panted. The keepers tempted him with all his favorite foods (bread, fish, and meat) to no avail. Even normally forbidden treats like soft-serve ice cream, jelly donuts, and honey failed. He wanted absolutely nothing to do with any of us.

I hated to antagonize him after what he'd been through the day before, but I had no choice except to dart him with his medication. If infection was brewing, we needed to control it with antibiotics. And if we could control the pain he must be feeling after the two-and-a-half-hour surgery, he might feel like eating and drinking. This time Aussie reacted to being darted with a roar so loud I seemed to feel it as well as hear it. It was a sound that echoed through the cavernous access tunnels and could probably be heard throughout the park. Thank goodness I didn't have to crawl through a small doorway into his den today.

By the following morning, Aussie had improved. Although I was happy to see him feeling better, he was not at all happy to see me. He looked me up and down and from side to side, as if to see if I'd brought along another dart for him. Sadly, our patients often hold a grudge against us. We try so hard to help them, and then they remember us with fear, even hatred—strong emotions to assign to a bear, but certainly the impression Aussie gave at that moment. Nonetheless, he was
soon eating and interacting with his keepers. They were still his friends.

Though the surgery had been accomplished successfully, I still had a major concern: would the suture at Aussie's hernia site hold up to the weight of his immense belly? After all, suture material is not designed with half-ton polar bears in mind. In the case of a large domestic animal, a belly bandage could be placed around the abdomen to support it and keep the wound clean. There was no way this would be possible with a polar bear. We'd just have to do our best to see that the surgery site stayed clean and that he didn't overexert himself.

Healthy polar bears are very active and spend much of their day walking or swimming. After recuperating in his den for over two weeks, Aussie began to go stir-crazy. He started banging on the door to let the keepers know he wanted access outside. Since his incision appeared healed, with no evidence of infection or hernia recurrence, we gave him a clean bill of health; it was time for him to go back on exhibit. The moment the door was opened, Aussie rushed out and headed straight for, you guessed it, the pool—just where you'd imagine a polar bear would go on a hot summer day. He hit the ice-cold water with a bounding belly flop, of course.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jennifer Langan has had a lifelong interest in both free-ranging and captive wildlife. After earning a bachelor's degree in animal science at the Agricultural College of the University of Illinois, she completed her studies at its
College of Veterinary Medicine. Dr. Langan did a small animal internship at Angell Memorial Animal Hospital in Boston and a residency in zoological medicine at the University of Tennessee, and then completed a fellowship with the Conservation Medicine Center of Chicago at Brookfield Zoo. Board certified by the American College of Zoological Medicine in 2001, she subsequently joined the faculty at the University of Illinois, where she is now an assistant clinical professor. Dr. Langan cofounded the Chicago Zoological and Aquatic Animal Residency Program, of which she is one of the directors. She spends the majority of her time as a clinical veterinarian working with students and residents at Brookfield Zoo.

Water-Breathing Dragons
by Ilze Berzins, PhD, DVM

ALEX WALKED INTO
my office with a frown on his face. “Dr. Berzins, we're in trouble. The dragons are floating.”

“What do you mean?!” I asked, trying not to panic. These are not words you want to hear about any new fish shipment, especially when the transport box contains a pair of rare weedy sea dragons, the first to arrive at your aquarium.

“They're at the surface and can't seem to dive down.”

A sea dragon is not, as the name suggests, the size of the Loch Ness Monster. It is a delicate, unusual-looking, and endangered fish from Australia, related to the sea horse, the tiny S-shaped fish you can buy almost anywhere. Dragons have elaborate leafy appendages, like fronds of seaweed, attached to their colorful bodies. At most, a full-grown weedy sea
dragon reaches eighteen inches in length and weighs less than three ounces.

Everyone on staff at the Florida Aquarium had been excited about the arrival of these special fish. In one way or another, we'd all helped in the planning, which had taken over a year, starting in the spring of 1998. As the aquarium's head of veterinary services, I'd been involved in every step of the preparations. Our biologists had researched ideal water conditions, housing, and what to feed the fish. Using this information, our exhibit designers had custom-built a new tank, one that would also provide a great view of the dragons for aquarium guests. Our marketing and public relations people had taken it from there, naming the new exhibit Dragons Down Under. I'd talked to a number of other fish vets about dragon medicine, just in case something went wrong.

The dragons had arrived at the aquarium that morning via special air cargo from Melbourne, Australia, with a stopover in Los Angeles. We'd planned that the fish would stay in a special holding tank for a minimum thirty-day quarantine. This would give them time to recover from the stress of transport. We'd also check them for parasites, deworm them if necessary, and keep a close eye on their feeding behavior. Next we'd move them to the new exhibit if they were healthy.

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