Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 6 de 6
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Zoo Biol ; 38(4): 384-388, 2019 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31206830

ABSTRACT

To monitor and evaluate potential risks to birds' health, invertebrate species that have been used as live food items had their body contents searched for endoparasites. The contents of approximately 10,000 invertebrates were analyzed. A principal component analysis was performed to study the relationship between the presence/absence of endoparasites and the characteristics of the invertebrates. In most of them, including the species preferred by birds such as caterpillars, waxworms, mealworms, most grasshoppers, and spiders, no organism was identified. Such findings suggest a low potential for parasite transmission associated with its consumption by birds. Although they had unknown or even unlikely implications for the birds' health, gregarines, oxyurides Leidynema sp., and digenetic trematodes Monolecithotrema sp. were found in samples from woodlice, cockroaches, and centipedes, respectively. The only avian parasites observed in this study were Heterakis gallinarum in samples from earthworms and Acuaria spiralis from woodlice. Suggestively, soil invertebrates showed a higher prevalence of endoparasites and may represent a higher potential risk in comparison to the other categories of invertebrates sampled herein. Detritivory and collected origin were also explanatory variables related to the presence of endoparasites in the current study.


Subject(s)
Animal Feed , Birds , Food Parasitology , Invertebrates/parasitology , Animals , Animals, Zoo , Feces/parasitology
3.
Trop Anim Health Prod ; 44(8): 1899-904, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22528538

ABSTRACT

Alternative diagnostic tools and interesting epidemiological assumptions were associated with an outbreak of Johne's disease. In a buffalo herd infected with paratuberculosis, seven clinically affected animals and 21 animals with anti-Mycobacterium avium ELISA reactions were identified. Total herd included 203 buffaloes. Most lesions were comparable to those described in buffaloes and cattle affected by Johne's disease. Water buffalo behaviors such as communal nursing and allosuckling may be additional risk factors for this disease. Detection of positive Ziehl-Neelsen staining and anti-M. avium immunolabeling in rectal biopsies from one buffalo with paratuberculosis are highlighted as auxiliary diagnostic tools for Johne's disease in live animals.


Subject(s)
Buffaloes , Disease Outbreaks/veterinary , Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis/isolation & purification , Paratuberculosis/diagnosis , Paratuberculosis/epidemiology , Rectum/pathology , Animal Husbandry , Animals , Antibodies, Bacterial/blood , Brazil/epidemiology , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay/veterinary , Feces/microbiology , Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis/immunology , Paratuberculosis/microbiology , Polymerase Chain Reaction/veterinary , Rectum/microbiology , Risk Factors , Seasons
4.
J Vet Diagn Invest ; 23(6): 1226-9, 2011 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22362807

ABSTRACT

The current study reports the investigation on the cause of sudden deaths associated with cardiac fibrosis in cattle in northern Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. The exclusion of known causes of bovine cardiac fibrosis as well as the absence of the plants in that region whose consumption has already been linked to the disorder motivated this investigation. The condition, which was attributed to the consumption of Amorimia exotropica, affected draft oxen, most of which died suddenly without showing any clinical signs during usual management or work. Globular hearts with white foci at their cut surfaces were the main gross findings, which corresponded microscopically from multifocal to coalescent areas of myocardial fibrosis. To confirm the condition, A. exotropica from the ranches where cattle died from the disease was dosed to rabbits, which showed similar lesions to those seen in dead cattle after receiving 10 doses of 3.6 g/kg at 4-day intervals. Electron microscopy on rabbit tissues revealed severe tumefaction of the cardiomyocytes associated with mitochondrial swelling, displacement, and rupture of the mitochondrial crests, and of the bundles of myofibrils, apart from large glycogen deposits within the sarcoplasm. It is suggested that mitochondrial changes triggered alterations that lead to cardiac fibrosis and that all of these changes were induced by A. exotropica cardiotoxicity.


Subject(s)
Cattle Diseases/chemically induced , Fibrosis/veterinary , Heart Diseases/veterinary , Malpighiaceae/adverse effects , Plants, Toxic/toxicity , Animals , Cattle , Death, Sudden/veterinary , Fibrosis/chemically induced , Fibrosis/pathology , Heart Diseases/chemically induced , Heart Diseases/pathology , Rabbits
5.
J Vet Diagn Invest ; 19(1): 109-12, 2007 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17459844

ABSTRACT

Anti-porcine circovirus type 2 (anti-PCV2) immunostaining was associated with cerebellar lymphohistiocytic vasculitis combined with hemorrhages (50 pigs) or with lymphohistiocytic meningitis (23 pigs) in pigs naturally affected with postweaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS). The animals originated from 12 farms in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. In total, 456 unthrifty 3- to 5-month-old postweaning pigs confirmed as PMWS cases were necropsied. Although most findings mimicked those extensively reported in PMWS-affected pigs, there were distinctive brain lesions that included multiple hemorrhages in the cerebellar leptomeninges associated with lymphohistiocytic vasculitis and fibrinoid degeneration in vessels of the cerebellum and periventricular areas (69 pigs). These vascular lesions were also seen in conjunction with lymphohistiocytic meningitis (38 additional pigs). PCV2 antigen was immunohistochemically demonstrated in the cytoplasm and nuclei from intralesional perivascular macrophages and endothelial-like cells in brain tissues. Together these findings suggest that these lesions were caused by PCV2.


Subject(s)
Brain/pathology , Porcine Postweaning Multisystemic Wasting Syndrome/pathology , Animals , Swine
6.
J Vet Diagn Invest ; 18(5): 494-6, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17037623

ABSTRACT

The consumption of monensin-containing feed resulted in deaths of water buffaloes from a feedlot in which cattle and buffaloes were kept together. The monensin formulation was recommended only for use in cattle. Anorexia, muscular weakness, dyspnea, and recumbency were the major clinical findings. The most significant gross lesions were focal pale areas in semitendinosus and semimembranosus muscles, in which segmental necrosis of myofibers was seen microscopically. To compare susceptibilities of species to monensin, 3 bovine calves and 3 buffalo calves were orally dosed. At 5, 7.5, and 10 mg/kg of monensin, only the buffaloes became ill and died. Clinical signs initiated 18-20 h postdosing and were comparable to those from field cases. Gross changes consisted of ascites, hydrothorax, hydropericardium, hepatomegaly, and focal pale areas in the myocardium and to a lesser degree in semitendinosus and semimembranosus muscles. Histopathological changes also resembled those from the field cases, but were especially pronounced in the myocardial cells. The hypothesis that buffaloes could have a lower tolerance to monensin than cattle has been supported by experimental cases.


Subject(s)
Anorexia/veterinary , Buffaloes , Ionophores/poisoning , Monensin/poisoning , Muscular Diseases/veterinary , Animals , Anorexia/chemically induced , Anorexia/pathology , Histocytochemistry/veterinary , Muscular Diseases/chemically induced , Muscular Diseases/pathology
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...