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Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for serologic detection of Salmonella dublin carriers on a large dairy
1993
Cows and calves from a 1,600-cow drylot dairy were screened for IgG antibodies to Salmonella dublin lipopolysaccharide (LPS), using an indirect ELISA. The ELISA was performed on milk samples from lactating cows and on sera from nonlactating cows and calves. Fecal samples were collected from calves and nonlactating cows for culture of Salmonella spp. All seropositive cattle were retested by culture and ELISA 5 times at monthly intervals or until antibody concentration decreased. None of the cattle remained culture-positive and seronegative. Prior to and during the sample collection period, approximately 30% of calves < 8 weeks old died of S dublin infection. Vaccination of cows with a killed S dublin/S typhimurium vaccine at cessation of lactation was a routine management practice. The ELISA-determined Igg response to vaccination had decreased by 50 days after vaccination. Eight cows and 5 calves that maintained a high serologic response to S dublin were purchased and moved to a research facility for 6 months of intensive monitoring. Lactating cows were milked twice daily, and culture of milk and feces for Salmonella spp was performed 5 times/wk. Serum IgG antibodies to S dublin LPS were measured weekly, using ELISA. At the end of 6 months, all 13 cattle were necropsied and tissues were obtained for culture of Salmonella spp. All 8 cows and 5 calves maintained persistently high ELISA titer for the 6 months of testing, and shed S dublin in the milk and/or feces during the same period. On this basis, they were termed S dublin carriers. Salmonella dublin was isolated from mammary tissue of 2 calves at necropsy, indicating that bacteremia may be a mode of mammary infection by S dublin. Results of the study indicated serologic testing can be used successfully on a large dairy to identify S dublin carrier cattle. Using initial milk screening, 42 of 1,268 lactating cows were identified as suspect, requiring repeated serologic testing. One nonlactating cow, 7 of the 42 suspect lactating cows, and 5 of the 222 calves maintained an Igg response, and were found to be S dublin carriers. Carrier cows shed S dublin in 3.35% of fecal samples and 2.51% of milk samples, and carrier calves shed S dublin in 17.26% of fecal samples.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Inhibition of myelopoiesis by serum from dogs exposed to estrogen
1993
The mechanism of estrogen-induced myelotoxicosis is unknown, although evidence indicates that estrogen does not directly damage the bone marrow granulocyte-macrophage progenitor cells and that the thymus is a probable mediator of the bone marrow suppression. Estrogen-induced production of a myelopoiesis-inhibitory factor by canine thymic stromal cells in vitro has been observed. Then, presence of a myelopoiesis-inhibitory factor in canine serum was investigated immediately after estrogen administration in vivo. Maximal reduction in colony-forming units-granulocyte/macrophage growth by sera from individual dogs varied. Individual dog sensitivity to estrogen-induced myelotoxicosis is seen clinically, and the cause is unknown. This serum factor could have a role in the eventual bone marrow hypoplasia seen in estrogen-treated dogs and is possibly the same factor produced by cultured thymic stromal cells exposed to estrogen.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Abomasal interstitial fluid-to-blood concentration gradient of pepsinogen in calves with type-1 and type-2 ostertagiosis
1993
Pepsinogen and protein concentrations were determined in blood samples, collected from the left gastroepiploic artery and vein, and in abomasal lymph from 15 steers naturally infected with Ostertagia ostertagi and 4 uninfected steers. In steers with type-1 ostertagiosis, the concentration gradient between the mucosal interstitium and the blood alone could account for higher than normal serum pepsinogen concentrations. High interstitial pepsinogen concentrations may have resulted from increased epithelial permeability or increased pepsinogen production and secretion. However, in steers with type-2 ostertagiosis, the concentration gradient could not entirely account for the high serum pepsinogen concentrations, suggesting that capillary permeability or surface area may have been altered. Lymphatic uptake contributed pepsinogen to the blood in all infected steers.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Critical tests of thiabendazole, oxibendazole, and oxfendazole for drug resistance of population-B equine small strongyles (1989 and 1990)
1993
Critical tests were conducted in horses (n = 11) with naturally acquired infections of benzimidazole (BZ)-resistant population-B small strongyles in 1989 and 1990. Anthelmintics administered were thiabendazole (44 mg/kg of body weight, n = 4), oxibendazole (10 mg/kg, n = 3), and oxfendazole (OFZ, 10 mg/kg; n = 4). All compounds were paste formulations administered orally except for 1 of the OFZ treatments, which was a suspension formulation given by stomach tube. Aggregate mean efficacy was calculated for all species of small strongyles, drug-resistant and nonresistant. The highest efficacy was for oxibendazole (98%) and OFZ 94%); efficacy for thiabendazole was 63%. Five genera and 16 species of small strongyles were recovered from the 11 horses, ranging from 7 to 13 species (mean, 11). Of these, 7 species were found to have resistance in variable degrees to most of the anthelmintics. These strongyles were Cyathostomum catinatum, Cyathostomum coronatum, Cylicocyclus nassatus, Cylicostephanus calicatus, Cylicostephanus goldi, Cylicostephanus longibursatus, and Cylicostephanus minutus. The large strongyle, Strongylus vulgaris, was present in afl 11 test horses, and efficacy was 100% for all drugs. Seven of the BZ-treated foals (at least 1 horse from each BZ-treatment group), were infected with S edentatus; removal was 100%.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Comparative efficacy of flunixin, ketoprofen, and ketoralac for treating endotoxemic neonatal calves
1993
Saline (0.9% NaCl) solution or 1 of 3 nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) was administered IV to 5 neonatal calves 15 minutes after the start of a 3-hour IV infusion of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 2 micrograms/kg/h). Four additional calves were given a 3-hour IV infusion of saline solution alone. Clinical attitude, mean arterial blood pressure, PCV, WBC, and plasma lactate, glucose, and eicosanoid concentrations (thromboxane B2, 6-keto-PGF(1 alpha)) were monitored for 12 hours. Flunixin meglumine (1.1 mg/kg of body weight, IV), ketoprofen (2.2 mg/kg, IV), and ketorolac tromethamine (1.1 mg/kg, IV) each ameliorated the clinical signs of endotoxemia and LPS-induced lacticemia, but failed to significantly alter the degree of leukopenia or hypoglycemia associated with infusion of LPS. Although the 3 NSAID prevented eicosanoid production, they provided only partial protection against LPS-induced hypotension. Each NSAID modified the response to LPS, but none was clearly superior to the others in modulating the clinical signs or physiologic alterations induced by infusion of LPS in neonatal calves.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Factors influencing fecal shedding of Campylobacter jejuni in dogs without diarrhea
1993
Rectal swab specimens were collected from 362 apparently healthy dogs of different origin, age, breed, and sex. Specimens were obtained in summer, autumn, and winter. Ninety-five thermophilic Campylobacter spp were isolated: C jejuni biotype I, n = 57, C jejuni biotype II, n = 1, C coli, n = 36, and C laridis, n = 1. Biotypes of C jejuni recovered were the same as those associated with Campylobacter-induced enteritis in human beings. Prevalence of C jejuni was significantly (P < 0.05) greater: in dogs < 6 months old than in adult dogs; in dogs living under high density and cohabitation housing conditions for long periods; and in autumn.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Comparison of stressed simultaneous urethral pressure profiles between anesthetized continent and incontinent bitches with urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence
1993
Gregory, S.P. | Holt, P.E.
The popular urodynamic technique of stressed urethral pressure profilometry used for investigation of genuine stress incontinence in women was adapted and applied to bitches. The aim was to assess the suitability and reproducibility of the technique in the canine species, and to determine whether differences seen in continent and incontinent women were found in bitches. Resting and stressed simultaneous urethral pressure profiles were obtained for 25 continent and 25 incontinent bitches, the latter diagnosed as having urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence. The stressed urethral pressure profiles were produced by ballottement of the abdomen during catheter withdrawal. The degree of stress induced was consistent and had got short-term reproducibility. Highly significant (P < 0.001) differences in the percentage of negative spikes extending below the resting intravesical pressure were found between continent and incontinent bitches. Significant differences were not observed in the pressure transmission profiles between continent and incontinent bitches; both groups had a gradual decrease in pressure transmission from the bladder neck to the external urethral orifice. The distance from the start of the urethral pressure profile to the first negative peak (attributable to respiration or ballottement) on the subtracted profile was compared with the radiographic distance that the bladder neck was positioned with respect to the cranial pubic brim, taking body weight and continence status into account. Body weight and continence status did not have significant effect on the relation in either instance. The distance between the start of the urethral pressure profile and the first negative peak induced by respiration was significantly (P < 0.05) related to the bladder neck position with respect to the cranial pubic brim, although it accounted for little of the total variance. Relation between the same variables during stressed urethral pressure profilometry, induced by abdominal ballottement, was not significant.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Inhibition of lipopolysaccharide-induced macrophage tumor necrosis factor alpha-synthesis by polymyxin B sulfate
1993
Coyne, C.P. | Fenwick, B.W.
The antibiotic polymyxin B sulfate is a cationic polypeptide with a unique cyclical configuration and distinct cationic characteristics. In this investigation, polymyxin B was evaluated to determine its ability to prevent synthesis of lactic acid and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) by lipopolysaccharide-stimulated strain RAW 2647 macrophage-like cell populations. In this context, gradient concentrations of polymyxin B were formulated in the presence of fixed concentrations of lipopolysaccharide fractions from Escherichia coli (B4:0111), E. coli (J5), Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella minnesota, and S. typhimurium (Re). Quantitation of TNF-alpha was established by the application of a tissue culture-based biological assay system, using the WEHI 164 clone 13 indicator cell line. Investigations also included evaluation of the ability of gradient concentrations of lipopolysaccharide fractions from E. coli (B4:0111), E. coli (J5), K. pneumoniae, P. aeruginosa, S. minnesota, and S. typhimurium (Re) to form a complex with polymyxin B. This was established through application of high-performance thin-layer chromatography techniques. On the basis of the known molecular characteristics of lipopolysaccharide, its lipid A-core subfractions, and polymyxin B, these results imply that cytoprotective properties of polymyxin B are attributable to direct interaction and subsequent complex formation. More specifically, the mechanism by which polymyxin B exerts affinity for lipopolysaccharide fractions is proposed to occur through attractive ionic interactions established between the cationic diaminobutyric acid residues of polymyxin B and the mono- or diphosphate group(s) of the lipid A-core moiety. It is highly probable that this molecular phenomenon is accompanied by hydrophobic interactions established between the terminal methyloctanoyl or methylheptanoyl groups of polymyxin B and the saturated carbon chains of the lipid A-core subfraction of lipopolysaccharide fractions.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Effect of Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis phospholipase D on viability and chemotactic responses of ovine neturophils
1993
Yozwiak, M.L. | Songer, J.G.
Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis phospholipase D (PLD) significantly affected viability of ovine neutrophils after 24 hours' exposure, This effect was more marked in cells that ingested PLD emulsified in oil. Treatment of neutrophils with PLD significantly (P < 0.05) reduced the ability of these cells to migrate toward activated sheep serum. The PLD was not chemotactic, but it activated normal sheep serum, producing factors that were chemotactic for neutrophils.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Ultrasonographically detected changes in equine superficial digital flexor tendons during the first months of race training
1993
Gillis, C.L. | Meagher, D.M. | Pool, R.R. | Stover, S.M. | Craychee, T.J. | Willits, N.
The forelimb superficial digital flexor (SDF) tendons of 6 Thoroughbreds were examined clinically and ultrasonographically during the first 4 months of race training. Sonograms were interpreted clinically and by use of computer-aided analysis. Tendon tissue from all horses was examined histologically at the end of the study. Computer-aided analysis of sonograms of the SDF tendons revealed trends toward an increase in mean cross-sectional area and a decrease in mean echogenicity over time with training. An inverse relation was found between increase in cross-sectional area and decrease in mean echogenicity over time in training. Two of the trained horses developed clinical signs of mild SDF tendonitis. Ultrasonography revealed an increase in cross-sectional area and decrease in mean echogenicity of clinically affected areas of the SDF tendons of 1 horse, compared with changes observed prior to the onset of tendonitis (these changes were not statistically significant). Blood vessels and lymphatics supplying the clinically and ultrasonographically affected tendon sites were large and thick-walled. These changes were not observed in the tendons of the other horses at the end of the study. The authors conclude that equine SDF tendons adapt to the early months of race training by increasing in size and decreasing in echogencity, as determined by ultrasonography.
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