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1.
Vet Pathol ; 50(3): 443-50, 2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23456965

ABSTRACT

Ten of 12 red-bellied short-necked turtles from a single clutch presented at 9 months of age with multiple white to tan nodules on their feet. Histologically, the nodules were composed of large periarticular deposits of mineralized crystalline material that extended into the joint spaces of interphalangeal joints and was surrounded by granulomatous inflammation and fibrosis. Crystallographic analysis determined the material to be apatite (calcium phosphate hydroxide) consistent with the tumoral calcinosis form of hydroxyapatite deposition disease (HADD). HADD has previously been described in aquatic turtles and rarely lizards and must be differentiated from gout in reptiles. A cause for the tumoral calcinosis lesions in these turtles could not be determined; however, based on previous reports in this species, a species-specific predilection, in conjunction with unknown environmental factors, is suspected. The use of the terms HADD, pseudogout (calcium pyrophosphate crystal deposition disease), and calcinosis circumscripta has been inconsistent, creating confusion in the literature.


Subject(s)
Apatites/chemistry , Calcinosis/veterinary , Foot Diseases/veterinary , Turtles , Animals , Calcinosis/pathology , Calcium/blood , Calcium Pyrophosphate/metabolism , Crystallography/veterinary , Durapatite/metabolism , Female , Fibrosis/pathology , Fibrosis/veterinary , Foot/pathology , Foot Diseases/pathology , Male , Phosphorus/blood , Skin/pathology , Species Specificity , Uric Acid/blood
2.
J Vet Diagn Invest ; 13(2): 143-51, 2001 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11289210

ABSTRACT

Three separate epidemics occurred in caiman lizards (Dracaena guianensis) that were imported into the USA from Peru in late 1998 and early 1999. Histologic evaluation of tissues from necropsied lizards demonstrated a proliferative pneumonia. Electron microscopic examination of lung tissue revealed a virus that was consistent with members of the family Paramyxoviridae. Using a rabbit polyclonal antibody against an isolate of ophidian (snake) paramyxovirus, an immunoperoxidase staining technique demonstrated immunoreactivity within pulmonary epithelial cells of 1 lizard. Homogenates of lung, brain, liver, or kidney from affected lizards were placed in flasks containing monolayers of either terrapene heart cells or viper heart cells. Five to 10 days later, syncytial cells formed. When Vero cells were inoculated with supernatant of infected terrapene heart cells, similar syncytial cells developed. Electron microscopic evaluation of infected terrapene heart cells revealed intracytoplasmic inclusions consisting of nucleocapsid strands. Using negative-staining electron microscopy, abundant filamentous nucleocapsid material with a herringbone structure typical of the Paramyxoviridae was observed in culture medium of infected viper heart cells. Seven months following the initial epizootic, blood samples were collected from surviving group 1 lizards, and a hemagglutination inhibition assay was performed to determine presence of specific antibody against the caiman lizard isolate. Of the 17 lizards sampled, 7 had titers of < or =1:20 and 10 had titers of >1:20 and < or =1:80. This report is only the second of a paramyxovirus identified in a lizard and is the first to snow the relationship between histologic and ultrastructural findings and virus isolation.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Viral/isolation & purification , Disease Outbreaks/veterinary , Lizards , Pneumonia, Viral/veterinary , Respirovirus Infections/veterinary , Respirovirus/immunology , Respirovirus/ultrastructure , Animals , Immunohistochemistry , Microscopy, Electron/veterinary , Pneumonia, Viral/epidemiology , Quarantine/veterinary , Respirovirus/isolation & purification , Respirovirus Infections/epidemiology , United States/epidemiology
3.
J Zoo Wildl Med ; 30(3): 348-53, 1999 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10572856

ABSTRACT

A presumptive diagnosis of avian tuberculosis can be made when characteristic histologic lesions and acid-fast bacilli are observed in avian tissue samples. However, a definitive diagnosis requires isolation and identification of the causative organism, a process that can take several weeks to complete. The purpose of the study was to determine whether formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded archival avian tissues could be tested by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to reliably and rapidly diagnose avian tuberculosis. Tissues were examined from both presumptive and definitive cases of avian tuberculosis from captive exotic birds obtained over a 14-yr period (1983-1997). The cases chosen consisted of birds that had characteristic histologic lesions with acid-fast bacilli. The primers used for PCR amplified a 180-base-pair fragment of 16S ribosomal RNA, a sequence specific for both Mycobacterium avium subsp. avium and M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis. If a sequence was detected in a sample, it was presumed that M. a. avium was the organism being detected. This M. avium fragment sequence was detected in 26 of the 97 samples (27%). Some of the negative PCR results may be explained by any of several factors that adversely affect nucleic acid integrity, particularly prolonged fixation in formalin. Of the 17 samples that were culture positive for M. avium and were known to have been fixed in formalin for < or = 4 wk, 11 tested positive by PCR (65%). The findings of this study show that PCR can be a rapid indicator of the presence of M. a. avium in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues. However, the relatively low detection rate the test demonstrated in this sample set may limit its practical use as a diagnostic tool.


Subject(s)
Mycobacterium avium/isolation & purification , Polymerase Chain Reaction/veterinary , Tuberculosis, Avian/diagnosis , Air Sacs/microbiology , Animals , Animals, Zoo , Birds , DNA, Bacterial/analysis , Female , Liver/microbiology , Male , Mycobacterium avium/genetics , Paraffin Embedding/veterinary , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/chemistry , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Retrospective Studies , Sensitivity and Specificity
4.
Vet Pathol ; 34(1): 15-22, 1997 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9150541

ABSTRACT

Balamuthia mandrillaris is a newly described free-living amoeba capable of causing fatal meningoencephalitis in humans and animals. Because the number of human cases is rapidly increasing, this infection is now considered an important emerging disease by the medical community. A retrospective review of the pathology database for the Zoological Society of San Diego (the San Diego Zoo and San Diego Wild Animal Park) for the period July 1965 through December 1994 revealed five cases of amoebic meningoencephalitis, all in Old World primates. The infected animals were a 3-year, 10-month-old female mandrill (Papio sphinx), from which the original isolation of B. mandrillaris was made, a 5-year-old male white-cheeked gibbon (Hylobates concolor leucogenys), a 1-year-old female western lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla), a 13-year, 5-month-old male western lowland gorilla, and a 6-year-old female Kikuyu colobus monkey (Colobus guereza kikuyuensis). Two different disease patterns were identified: the gibbon, mandrill, and 1-year-old gorilla had an acute to subacute necrotizing amoebic meningoencephalitis with a short clinical course, and the adult gorilla and colobus monkey had a granulomatous amoebic meningoencephalitis with extraneural fibrogranulomatous inflammatory lesions and a long clinical course. Indirect immunofluorescent staining of amoebas in brain sections with a Balamuthia-specific polyclonal antibody was positive in all five animals. Indirect immunofluorescent staining for several species of Acanthamoeba, Naegleria fowleri, and Hartmanella vermiformis was negative. Direct examination of water and soil samples from the gorilla and former mandrill enclosures revealed unidentified amoebas in 11/27 samples, but intraperitoneal inoculations in mice failed to induce disease. Attempts to isolate amoebas from frozen tissues from the adult male gorilla were unsuccessful.


Subject(s)
Amebiasis/pathology , Amebiasis/veterinary , Meningoencephalitis/pathology , Meningoencephalitis/veterinary , Amebiasis/epidemiology , Amoeba/growth & development , Animals , Animals, Zoo , Ape Diseases/epidemiology , Ape Diseases/pathology , Brain/parasitology , Cercopithecidae , Female , Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Indirect , Gorilla gorilla , Kidney/parasitology , Liver/parasitology , Lung/parasitology , Male , Meningoencephalitis/epidemiology , Mice , Prevalence , Retrospective Studies , Soil Microbiology , Water Microbiology
5.
Am J Vet Res ; 57(4): 580-7, 1996 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8712528

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether colonic smooth muscle dysfunction is involved in the pathogenesis of idiopathic megacolon in cats. DESIGN: In vitro smooth muscle mechanical measurements. ANIMALS: Colon from healthy cats and cats with idiopathic megacolon. PROCEDURE: Colonic smooth muscle strips were suspended in physiologic buffer solution, attached to isometric force transducers, and contracted with acetylcholine (ACh; 10(-9) to 10(-4)M), substance P (SP; 10(-10) to 10(-6)M), cholecystokinin (CCK; 10(-11) to 10(-8)M), potassium chloride (KCl; 10 to 80 mM), or electrical field stimulation (EFS; 25 V, 1 to 30 Hz, 0.5-millisecond duration). Isometric stress responses were compared with those obtained from healthy controls. Colonic smooth muscle strips were also evaluated histologically for neuronal and smooth muscle cell morphology. RESULTS: Passive isometric stress was not altered, but the active isometric stress responses of megacolon smooth muscle to ACh, SP, CCK, KCl, and EFS were significantly (P < 0.05) diminished, compared with healthy controls. Differences were observed in longitudinal and circular smooth muscle from proximal and distal portions of the colon. Histologic evaluation revealed few abnormalities of smooth muscle cells or of myenteric or submucosal plexus neurons. The contractile response of megacolon smooth muscle to EFS, and the inhibition of this response by tetrodotoxin, suggest that myenteric and submucosal plexus neurons in megacolon smooth muscle are functional. CONCLUSIONS: Idiopathic megacolon is a generalized dysfunction of colonic smooth muscle in cats. The diminished isometric stress responses to receptor occupancy (ACh, SP, and CCK) and membrane depolarization (KCl) further suggest that the disorder involves disturbance in the activation of smooth muscle myofilaments.


Subject(s)
Cat Diseases , Colon/physiopathology , Isometric Contraction , Megacolon/veterinary , Muscle, Smooth/physiopathology , Acetylcholine/pharmacology , Animals , Cats , Cholecystokinin/pharmacology , Colectomy , Colon/drug effects , Colon/physiology , Electric Stimulation , In Vitro Techniques , Isometric Contraction/drug effects , Megacolon/physiopathology , Megacolon/surgery , Muscle, Smooth/drug effects , Muscle, Smooth/physiology , Potassium Chloride/pharmacology , Reference Values , Substance P/pharmacology
6.
J Clin Microbiol ; 33(9): 2280-9, 1995 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7494015

ABSTRACT

Twenty-four young adult domestic cats from a commercial vendor were found to be infected with Helicobacter pylori. Histopathologic analyses, selected electron microscopy, and urease mapping were performed on mucosal samples collected from the cardias and fundi, bodies, and antra of these cats' stomachs. H. pylori organisms were abundant in all areas of the stomach on the basis of histologic evaluation and urease mapping. H. pylori infection was associated with a moderate to severe lymphofollicular gastritis in 21 of 24 cats (88%). The gastritis was most pronounced in the antral region and consisted mainly of multifocal lymphoplasmacytic follicular infiltrates in the deep mucosa. The severity of gastritis in the antrum corresponded to high numbers of H. pylori there on the basis of the use of the urease assay as an indicator of H. pylori colonization. Ten of 24 cats (42%) also had small to moderate numbers of eosinophils in the gastric mucosa. All 24 cats had gastric lymphoid follicles, with follicles being most prevalent in the antrum. Electron microscopy of gastric tissue revealed numerous H. pylori organisms, some of which were closely adhered to the mucosal epithelium. Human H. pylori gene-specific primers to ureA and ureB amplified products of similar sizes from H. pylori cat isolates. Digestion of the products with restriction enzymes resulted in fragments characteristic of the restriction fragment length polymorphism patterns of H. pylori isolates from humans. In the domestic cat, H. pylori infection is associated with a lymphofollicular gastritis, consisting of lymphocytic and plasmacytic infiltration into the lamina propria, and the organism appears to provide chronic antigenic stimulation resulting in the formation of gastric lymphoid follicles.


Subject(s)
Cat Diseases/microbiology , Gastritis/veterinary , Helicobacter Infections/veterinary , Helicobacter pylori/isolation & purification , Animals , Base Sequence , Cats , DNA Primers , Helicobacter pylori/ultrastructure , Humans , Microscopy, Electron , Molecular Sequence Data , Stomach/microbiology , Stomach/ultrastructure
7.
Vet Pathol ; 32(3): 230-5, 1995 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7604489

ABSTRACT

The clinical and pathologic features of five young Maltese dogs with a necrotizing meningoencephalitis were studied and compared with published reports of the necrotizing meningoencephalitis of Pug dogs. The ages of the Maltese dogs ranged from 9 months to 4 years. Four dogs were male, and one was female. The dogs had a history of seizures with or without other neurologic signs for 3 days to 20 weeks prior to death. Cerebrospinal fluid examination in three dogs revealed a pleocytosis and elevated levels of protein. At necropsy, the cerebrum was asymmetrically swollen in four dogs, with a loss of distinction between the gray and white matter and mild to moderate asymmetrical dilation of the lateral ventricles. Histologically, there was extensive necrosis and nonsuppurative inflammation of the cerebral gray and white matter, overlying meninges, and adjacent thalamus and hippocampus. The 4-year-old dog had the longest duration of clinical signs and had little inflammation but extensive atrophy of affected areas, with astrocytosis. The clinical course and pathologic changes in these Maltese dogs are indistinguishable from those in reported cases of necrotizing meningoencephalitis of Pug dogs, indicating that this lesion is probably not unique to Pug dogs.


Subject(s)
Brain/pathology , Dog Diseases/pathology , Meninges/pathology , Meningoencephalitis/veterinary , Seizures/veterinary , Animals , Cerebrospinal Fluid/chemistry , Cerebrospinal Fluid/cytology , Cerebrospinal Fluid Proteins/analysis , Dogs , Female , Leukocyte Count/veterinary , Male , Meningoencephalitis/pathology , Necrosis , Seizures/etiology
8.
Vet Pathol ; 32(2): 122-6, 1995 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7771051

ABSTRACT

A retrospective study was conducted of all feline necropsies over a 7-year period. Of a total of 1,472 necropsies, 37 cases of endomyocarditis (EMC) and 25 cases of left ventricular endocardial fibrosis (LVEF) (previously called restrictive or intermediate cardiomyopathy) were identified. There was a subset of four cats with EMC that had histologic features of both diseases. Interstitial pneumonia was seen in 25 of 35 cats (71%) with EMC but in only seven of 25 cats (28%) with LVEF. Thrombi or thromboemboli were seen in 14 of 25 cats (56%) with LVEF but in only six of 37 of cats (16%) with EMC. In both LVEF and EMC, thromboemboli were located in the abdominal aorta, left atrium and ventricle of the heart, femoral artery, cranial mesenteric artery, liver, pulmonary artery, jugular vein, or a meningeal vessel. Each cat had a single thrombus/thromboembolus, except for four cats with LVEF that had more than one. The histologic and clinical findings suggest that EMC and LVEF represent temporally different manifestations of a single disease entity.


Subject(s)
Cat Diseases/pathology , Endomyocardial Fibrosis/veterinary , Myocarditis/veterinary , Animals , Cats , Endomyocardial Fibrosis/complications , Endomyocardial Fibrosis/pathology , Female , Heart Ventricles/pathology , Male , Myocarditis/complications , Myocarditis/pathology , Retrospective Studies
9.
Infect Immun ; 62(6): 2367-74, 1994 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8188360

ABSTRACT

Helicobacter pylori has been directly linked with active chronic gastritis, peptic ulceration, and gastric adenocarcinoma in humans. Although a substantial portion of the human population is colonized with H. pylori, the patterns of transmission of the organism remain in doubt, and reservoir hosts have not been identified. This study documents the isolation of H. pylori from domestic cats obtained from a commercial vendor. The isolation of H. pylori from these cats was confirmed by morphologic and biochemical evaluations, fatty acid analysis, and 16S rRNA sequence analysis. H. pylori was cultured from 6 cats and organisms compatible in appearance with H. pylori were observed in 15 additional cats by histologic examination. In most animals, H. pylori was present in close proximity to mucosal epithelial cells or in mucus layers of the glandular or surface epithelium. Microscopically, H. pylori-infected cat stomachs contained a mild to severe diffuse lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate with small numbers of neutrophils and eosinophils in the subglandular and gastric mucosae. Lymphoid follicles were also noted, particularly in the antrum, and often displaced glandular mucosal tissue. Thus, the domestic cat may be a potential model for H. pylori disease in humans. Also, the isolation of H. pylori from domestic cats raises the possibility that the organism may be a zoonotic pathogen, with transmission occurring from cats to humans.


Subject(s)
Cats/microbiology , Helicobacter pylori/isolation & purification , Public Health , Animals , Base Sequence , Fatty Acids/analysis , Helicobacter pylori/chemistry , Helicobacter pylori/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/chemistry , Stomach/pathology , Urease/analysis
10.
J Vet Intern Med ; 8(2): 112-6, 1994.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8046673

ABSTRACT

A syndrome of cerebellar Purkinje's cell degeneration and coat color dilution was diagnosed in a family of Rhodesian Ridgeback dogs. One male and 1 female from the same litter and 1 female from a different litter were evaluated for growth retardation, inability to ambulate, and progressive ataxia. On physical examination, lateral recumbency, severe ataxia, tremors, and diluted coat color were identified. Littermates with nondiluted coat color were neurologically normal. Results of routine laboratory tests, urine metabolic screenings, and karyotype analyses were normal. Histopathologic abnormalities at necropsy included cerebellar Purkinje's cell degeneration, reduced granular cell layer thickness, and uneven distribution of macromelanosomes within hair shafts. Pedigree analysis suggested an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. This is the first description of a genetic syndrome affecting the central nervous system and associated with coat color dilution in dogs.


Subject(s)
Cerebellar Diseases/veterinary , Dog Diseases/genetics , Hair Diseases/veterinary , Purkinje Cells/pathology , Animals , Cerebellar Diseases/genetics , Cerebellar Diseases/pathology , Cerebellum/pathology , Dog Diseases/pathology , Dogs , Female , Hair Diseases/genetics , Hair Diseases/pathology , Male , Medulla Oblongata/pathology , Pedigree , Syndrome
11.
J Am Vet Med Assoc ; 202(11): 1867-8, 1993 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8320157

ABSTRACT

Hemorrhage from the gastrointestinal tract of a young dog resulted in melena with concurrent anemia. Exploratory laparotomy revealed the hemorrhage originated from an arteriovenous fistula in the jejunum. Resection of the abnormal part of the jejunum was curative. The arteriovenous fistula in the dog was probably congenital in origin, but may have been the result of gastrointestinal tract trauma.


Subject(s)
Arteriovenous Fistula/veterinary , Dog Diseases/etiology , Jejunum/blood supply , Melena/veterinary , Anastomosis, Surgical/veterinary , Anemia/etiology , Anemia/veterinary , Animals , Arteriovenous Fistula/complications , Arteriovenous Fistula/surgery , Dogs , Female , Jejunum/pathology , Jejunum/surgery , Melena/etiology , Mesentery/blood supply , Mesentery/surgery
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