Cells closely resembling X-cells were the primary cellular component of a large pseudotumor in the viscera of a black croaker (Cheilotrema saturnum). The fish was captured in coastal waters off San Diego, California and was maintained at the Scripps Aquarium. After 2 years in captivity the fish exhibited extreme abdominal swelling due to a visceral mass, which weighed approximately one-fifth the total body weight. The cells associated with the pseudotumor were identified as X-cells due to their great variability in size, vesicular nuclei which stained negative for DNA and their formation of a pseudotumor. This is the first report of an X-cell pseudotumor in the visceral cavity. We agree with the hypothesis that the X-cell is a protozoan, and the description here of X-cells in a visceral pseudotumor in a fish of the family Sciaenidae associates an additional type of lesion with this enigmatic parasite.
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January 01 1988
An Internal X-Cell Pseudotumor in a Black Croaker (Cheilotrema saturnum)
M. L. Kent;
M. L. Kent
1 Battelle Marine Research Laboratory, 439 West Sequim Bay Road, Sequim, Washington 98382, USA
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M. S. Myers;
M. S. Myers
2 Environmental Conservation Division, Northwest and Alaska Fisheries Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, Seattle, Washington 98112, USA
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S. R. Wellings;
S. R. Wellings
3 1920 H. Roche Harbor Road, Friday Harbor, Washington 98250, USA
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R. A. Elston
R. A. Elston
1 Battelle Marine Research Laboratory, 439 West Sequim Bay Road, Sequim, Washington 98382, USA
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J Wildl Dis (1988) 24 (1): 142–145.
Article history
Received:
May 05 1987
Citation
M. L. Kent, M. S. Myers, S. R. Wellings, R. A. Elston; An Internal X-Cell Pseudotumor in a Black Croaker (Cheilotrema saturnum). J Wildl Dis 1 January 1988; 24 (1): 142–145. doi: https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-24.1.142
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