Part 2: Hands-on with Icyizere and Mushya

Later in the day, Magda, Jean Felix, and I met to map out our intervention plan. We would anesthetize only the mother to start with, then evaluate the infant as quickly as possible. I preferred not to anesthetize him unless absolutely necessary. His pale mucous membranes worried me. We couldn’t draw many conclusions from a simple skin scraping, however. We’d need to perform as complete a workup as possible. Our goal would be to collect as many routine samples from Mushya as possible, including blood, urine, feces, and a skin biopsy.

Obviously, it would be a lot easier to do all this with anesthesia, but that seemed an unacceptable risk. Without any hair, Mushya’s body temperature would drop rapidly the moment we took him away from Icyizere. We’d use hot water bottles and hope for sunshine, but the recovery phase is always unpredictable in mountain gorilla interventions. The infant might not recover quickly enough to hold onto his mother as she woke up–or she might drop him, sensing something wrong. Thoughts of Umoja’s case ran through our minds. We had no way of ensuring that Icyizere wouldn’t start off in search of her group and, in her haste, drop her infant along the way as Nyiramurema had done.

My feeling was that with Mushya so weak, we’d be able to do the procedure without anesthetic—that the main challenge would be to keep the mother anesthetized long enough to complete the planned exam. Yes, we’d stress the infant by poking and prodding him, and if he cried out, Isabukuru, the silverback, might very well react. But since the mother is of much greater value to the population, the hard fact was that her health and well-being should take priority over that of the baby. We’d abort the procedure if there were any problems with her anesthesia. Everyone agreed with me, even though it meant we might not accomplish our diagnostic goal.

We made our final plan: both mother and infant would receive ivermectin in case the problem was mites. Mushya would be given subcutaneous fluids with B-vitamins and some oral iron, too. Magda would do the darting and then shift to do the baby’s work-up and treatments with Elisabeth; Jean Felix would collect blood samples from the mother and other samples as possible; I’d take over monitoring the mother’s anesthesia and decide about any additional drugs for her and possibly the baby. I’d also take the baby’s blood, since I’d learned to do this on an even smaller mountain gorilla, little Ndakasi, one of the Goma orphans, during her bout with pneumonia. We packed our kits. We were ready.

blackback kubaha sits calmy
Blackback Kubaha sits calmly on the morning of Icyizere and Mushya’s intervention

The next morning we were off on time and made it to Isabukuru’s Group three hours later, just before 9 a.m. We had three of Karisoke’s most experienced field staff to help the vet team: Emmanuel, Fundi, and Bwarabwiza. They’d lead the effort to chase off Isabukuru and the rest of the family as soon as Icyizere went to sleep under the effects of the anesthetic. Once again, we found Icyizere eating calmly, holding Mushya in the crook of one arm. Over the next thirty minutes, while we waited for our darting opportunity, Mushya scratched almost constantly. He seemed even itchier than he had the day before.

Magda’s dart was perfect and Icyizere went down quickly. Isabukuru and the rest of the group milled around their sleeping family member, unconcerned by the extra people and, of course, unaware of what was about to happen. As we later agreed, it was one of our easiest interventions in terms of crowd control. When the trackers raised their voices and sticks, Isabukuru was gone in a flash. So were Kubaha, the blackback, Muntu, another adult female, and the two youngsters Ikaze and Isaro.

icyizere/mushya intervention team
Lucy, Magda, Jean Felix, and Elisabeth examine and treat Icyizere, who is anesthetized, and Mushya

The rest of the procedure went almost precisely according to plan–including the need to make decisions about sample collection based on Icyizere’s anesthetic level. She was stable, but her abdomen was full of food. This is the disadvantage of field anesthesia, particularly when the darted animal is not sick. The longer we keep a mountain gorilla under anesthesia with a bellyful of food, the greater the risk of bloat and, even worse, regurgitation. The best way to prevent these dangerous complications is either to deepen the anesthesia and intubate the patient, or simply to finish up quickly. Twenty minutes into the procedure, we had to decide one way or another. My sixth sense told me to finish up.

lucy_icyizere blood sample
Lucy taking a blood sample from Mushya with Elisabeth’s help

Sure enough, Icyizere sat up at 35 minutes, which is when the initial dose usually wears off. Magda had taken multiple samples of hair and skin scrapings from both gorillas and was about to do the skin biopsies. Since Mushya’s skin showed only hair loss and no lesions, and Icyizere’s skin also looked normal, these weren’t the worst things to miss. Even so, our goal is to do a complete exam, and I think everyone felt a little disappointed. But as I reminded the team—and myself—later, we had everything else we needed, and both patients had recovered fine.

magda taking skin scrapings - mushya_icyizere
Magda takes skin scraping samples

Mushya had remained remarkably quiet throughout the procedure, even for the needle stick–perhaps a little too quiet. But we’d let him hold onto his mother firmly the whole time, and maybe that helped keep him calm. He continued to hang on as Icyizere got up to leave. I gave her one more injection–the antidote we use to reverse the anesthesia completely. Holding Mushya carefully, she walked a short distance away, settling in a clump of vegetation next to the base of a tree.

mushya holding icyizere
Mushya holding onto Icyizere as she wakes up from anesthesia

By the time we’d packed up our kits, Icyizere was sitting in the same place, fully recovered and we could see at least one of her family members approaching from a distance. Thirty minutes later, as we ran down the trail with our precious samples, we heard Isabukuru beating his chest. The family had been reunited.

jean felix blood sample from icyizere
Jean Felix collecting a blood sample from Icyizere

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7 Comments

  1. Christine C.
    Posted December 29, 2008 at 9:23 am | Permalink

    Dr. Lucy — thank you for this great account…poor Mushya, I do hope your intervention helps her out…she is such a prcious little thing…did you get a feel for what might be wrong with her?

  2. Lisa, California
    Posted December 29, 2008 at 9:55 am | Permalink

    Hi Dr. Lucy, Wow! As ususal, you had me on the edge of my seat. Amazing work. Everything went perfectly. I just hope litte Mushya’s recovery, from whatever this thing is, goes as well. He’s so tiny and it just broke my heart to read that he stayed so quiet during the procedure. How remarkably caring it was of you all to allow him to hold on to his Mom. You guys amaze me with how you really think of everything. The tiniest of details to make these interactions as painless and as free from stress as possible. I’m truly amazed. Great work and I’m preying that you are able to diagnose little Mushya’s condition and that you will be able to treat him. All the best to you and your great team. Lisa

  3. Posted December 29, 2008 at 1:23 pm | Permalink

    Yes, I’m hoping little Mushya recovers and grows stronger, too. I’m sure there’ll be another installment, right? The photos are really great, too. They really bring us into the story so thanks to all of you for taking time to photograph your field procedures.

    s.

  4. Annie
    Posted December 29, 2008 at 2:49 pm | Permalink

    Wow…….amazing and suspenseful story! I am with Lisa and Sheryl you guys are very detailed…guess you have to be..I hope this precious little one will turn around and begin to heal…thanks for the pictures and the story..hope the New Year brings peace and tranquility to these creatures!!!!!!

  5. Theresa
    Posted December 29, 2008 at 9:55 pm | Permalink

    Thank you so much Dr. Lucy for this post. I am also amazed at the planning and details which I am sure is done to ensure the least amount of stress on the gorilla being treated. I am fervently praying that you will find some answers that will help little Mushya get well and thrive. You are all angels for helping these wonderful creatures and I am so grateful you are there when they need expert help. Mushya is such a sweet little guy and I would love nothing more than to see him get well and be a normal little gorilla. Please let us know what you find and what plans are made on the result. Thank you!

  6. Megan
    Posted January 1, 2009 at 6:20 pm | Permalink

    Happy New Year!

    Poor, sweet Mushya. Such a sweetheart. I wish I knew what was going through his mind when his mother was anesthetized and these strange creatures who stand upright were poking and prodding him. I wonder what he told his mother about it : ) I am so glad that the intervention went smoothly and I pray, very hard, that Mushya’s health has improved.

    As always, thank you so much for the update!

  7. haley
    Posted February 12, 2009 at 11:17 am | Permalink

    wow!im such a big fan of your site and i want do be like you when i graduate!….. “)

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