Zoo Performs First-Ever Rhino CT Scan

It was easier to bring the scanner to the rhino than the other way around
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Apr 25, 2018 1:11 AM CDT
Rhino Becomes First of Species to Get CT Scan
Chicago Zoological Society staff stabilize Layla.   (Kelly Tone/Chicago Zoological Society via AP)

A rhinoceros at a suburban Chicago zoo has undergone what's believed to be the first CT scan performed on the species. It was no easy task. Layla is 7 1/2 years old and 2,300 pounds and lives at Brookfield Zoo. Zoo officials say the scan was needed to diagnose an obstruction in Layla's nasal passageway that made it difficult for her to breathe. Because Layla was too large to move inside the zoo's hospital, a CT scanner had to be brought to the Pachyderm House, the AP reports.

A front loader was needed to lift the rhino onto the surgical table. About 40 staff members helped with the process and did practice runs with 2,300 pounds of concrete. The images revealed abnormal tissue near an upper molar. The zoo says Layla is resting comfortably and surgery is planned. (More rhinoceros stories.)

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