Bears Burned in California Wildfires Healed With Fish Skins, Acupuncture

Unique Treatment Could Translate to Companion Animals, Humans

Two adult female black bears that were burned during the Thomas Fire in Southern California have recuperated and are now back in the wild thanks to the help of University of California, Davis, veterinarians and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Deana Clifford, senior wildlife veterinarian with the CDFW and an assistant clinical professor at the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine worked to treat the burns, and enlisted Jamie Peyton, chief of the Integrative Medicine Service at UC Davis Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital to help with pain management.

Both bears had severe burns on their paws. The younger bear, which was brought to the lab on Dec. 9, had severe third-degree burns on all four paws.

Jamie Peyton, chief of the Integrative Medicine Service at UC Davis Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital examines burned bear paws.  (Karin Higgins / UC Davis)
“When I saw the degree of injury that she had and how much pain she was in, as a veterinarian, it just tugs at your heart,” said Peyton, who also serves as associate director for the UC Davis Center for Advancing Pain Relief. “You want to do everything possible to get these animals feeling better. It’s not their fault they were in this horrible fire and they’re in a strange environment and they don’t know what’s going on and they hurt.”

Peyton initially estimated it would take four to six months for the bears’ wounds to heal. Giving them a long time to recover wasn’t an option. The team didn’t want to risk having the bears acclimate to people or captivity. Standard care, which would require frequent bandage changes, would also be difficult with a wild animal. The team also had trouble getting the bears to eat pain medication. Complicating the situation even more, they soon found out that the older bear was pregnant.

“That was a game changer for us, because we knew it wouldn’t be ideal for her to give birth in confinement,” Clifford said. “We aren’t really set up to have a birth at the lab holding facilities, and we knew there was a high probability that she could reject the cub, due to all the stress she was under.”

An innovative solution: Fish skins

Peyton remembered reading about a group in Brazil that had used sterilized tilapia skins to successfully treat burns on humans. While the treatment had never been performed in the United States and never on animals, Peyton decided it was worth trying.

“The high collagen level in the fish skins helps with healing and acts like a matrix,” said Peyton. “It would act as protection and it was pretty inexpensive and available.”

It took Peyton and her team several days to obtain the fish skins and sterilize them in the lab, but the payoff was worth it. Before the fish skins were sutured to the bears, the bears could only sit with their paws off the ground.

“One of the first things that the bear did was stand up after we applied them,” said Peyton. “She was more mobile, which in my mind is a huge success for pain control.”

The bears also received acupuncture, chiropractic care, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS), pulsed electromagnetic field therapy, and cold laser therapy. All of the integrative therapies help with pain control and enhance wound healing by increasing blood and lymphatic flow. The team also worked with UC Davis veterinary pharmacists to create a new burn salve designed to ease the bears’ pain.

Peyton believes all of these therapies played a role in the bears’ healing, but it wasn’t until the tilapia skins were applied that the biggest change occurred. In a matter of weeks, new skin had grown back on the bears’ paw pads.


(Via UC Davis)