A Lion With Skin Cancer Has Received Radiation Therapy In Hospital.

Spending time in the hospital can be daunting enough, but spare a thought for patients in a hospital in South Africa who have had to share a ward with a 570lb lion.
The appropriately-named Chaos is receiving radiation treatment for skin cancer lesions on his nose at Muelmed Mediclinic in Pretoria, north-east South Africa. The 16-year-old cat was unconscious, strapped down and smuggled in via the back door to avoid startling other patients. Chaos was treated by five radiotherapists and an oncologist at the hospital, as there are no radiotherapy facilities for animals in the country. 
 
He has lived at Lory Park animal and owl sanctuary (since when have owls not been animals?) since he was just a few days old and his keeper, Kara Heynis, said the treatment was expensive but 'absolutely worth it'. She said: "He is like our child so we will do anything we need for him."Fortunately for other patients at the hospital, the staff ensured the coast was clear when they brought in the lion. Radiation Specialist, Hanri Reynolds, said: "We're a registered zoological facility so he was accompanied at all times and had all the necessary permits."We started the whole process of transporting him to the hospital at 10:30 and returned back home at 13:15."There were no other human patients around while he was treated and he came into the hospital through a back door."
Chaos is currently being kept in the shade in the enclosure he shares with a female lion until he has finished all of his treatment in around a month. Typically, animals without hair or fur - such as hippos, warthogs and elephants - are most susceptible to skin cancer. Lions in the wild normally live to around the age of 14, but in captivity, the average life expectancy of a lion is 22. The outlook is quite different for some farmed lions though. Pictures recently emerged from a farm in South Africa where lions are kept in appalling, cramped conditions before being sold to tourist attractions. These lions are actually nearly hairless because of mange, a skin disease caused by parasitic mites that cause severe itching, hair loss and the formation of scabs and lesions.
According to a report by HSI, up to 12,000 animals, a year are bred on around 200 farms, in an industry that has been referred to as the 'snuggle scam'.Reportedly, the animals are bred at the farms, then sent to petting centres where tourists can get close to the animals. From there, they are can be sent to safaris or 'walking with lions' tours, with holidaymakers blissfully unaware of the suffering the creatures have endured.
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