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0000-0001-5457-2678
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University of Adelaide Roseworthy Campus
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Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 10-2002
DOI: 10.1016/S0304-4017(02)00234-0
Abstract: Three pregnant cows were each orally challenged at 10 weeks of gestation with 600 sporulated oocysts of Neospora caninum. The number of oocysts was limited by those available. In concurrent bioassays, one oocyst per os infected each of two gerbils. Challenged cattle developed Neospora-specific antibody, cell proliferation and gamma-interferon responses. N. caninum specific PCR demonstrated persisting infection in the brains of cows 4 months after calving. Abortion was not induced and there was no evidence of transplacental infection in the healthy calves born at full-term. This experiment suggests that the dose threshold for induction of abortion exceeds 600 oocysts.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 10-1999
DOI: 10.1016/S0020-7519(99)00132-0
Abstract: The ultrastructure of tachyzoites, bradyzoites and tissue cysts of the NC-1, NC-5 and NC-Liverpool strains of Neospora caninum are reviewed and compared with those of the VEG and ME-49 strains of Toxoplasma gondii. While each stage of N. caninum and T. gondii shared many ultrastructural characteristics, each parasite stage also had certain features or organelles that could be used to distinguish the two parasites. Some of the most prominent ultrastructural differences occurred in the number, appearance and location of rhoptries, looped-back rhoptries, micronemes, dense granules, small dense granules and micropores. The tissue cysts of both parasites were also basically similar, being surrounded by a cyst wall and not compartmentalised by septa. The cyst wall of N. caninum was irregular and substantially thicker, 0.5-4 microm, than those of T. gondii which were smooth and 0.5 microm thick.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 11-2005
DOI: 10.1016/J.VETPAR.2005.06.011
Abstract: To investigate whether dogs shed Neospora caninum oocysts more than once, five dogs with a previous history of shedding oocysts were fed infected bovine tissues. Two of three dogs shed oocysts when they were re-exposed 18-20 months after the first challenge two other dogs re-exposed earlier, only 8 months after the primary exposure, did not produce oocysts. These results suggest that dogs may become refractory to shedding N. caninum oocysts for a period approximately between 8 and 18 months after a primary infection however, this possibility requires statistical validation by testing of more dogs. The development of a high antibody titer did not ensure that a dog would completely resist shedding oocysts after consuming an infected meal. Oocyst production was also compared between puppies and adult dogs with primary infections. Twelve puppies (three from the present study and nine from a previous study) shed significantly more oocysts (mean: 166,400) compared with five adult dogs following primary exposure (mean: 2900), indicating that a dog's age can influence N. caninum oocyst production (P=0.02).
Publisher: No publisher found
Date: 2002
DOI: 10.1016/S0020-7519(02)00126-1
Abstract: Neospora caninum, like Toxoplasma gondii, undergoes stage conversion in chronically infected animals, and forms tissue cysts which contain the slowly proliferating bradyzoite stage. These tissue cysts are delineated by a cyst wall, protect the parasite from physiological and immunological reactions on part of the host, and bradyzoites remain viable within an infected host for many years. However, unlike T. gondii, N. caninum bradyzoites have been difficult to obtain using in vitro culture techniques, and current protocols, based on those developed for T. gondii, have been shown to be not very efficient in promoting tachyzoite-to-bradyzoite stage conversion. We report here an alternative in vitro culture method to obtain stage conversion of N. caninum from the proliferative to the cystic stage by using the Nc-Liverpool isolate, murine epidermal keratinocytes as host cells, and continuous treatment of infected cultures with 70 microM sodium nitroprusside for up to 8 days. This treatment significantly reduced parasite proliferation as assessed by Neospora-specific quantitative real-time PCR. The expression of bradyzoite markers was analysed by immunofluorescence following 4 and 8 days of in vitro culture using antibodies directed against bradyzoite antigen 1, the mAbCC2, and the lectin Dolichos biflorus agglutinin. Expression of the tachyzoite-specific immunodominant antigen NcSAG1 and the tachyzoite antigen NcMIC1 was also assessed. Transmission electron microscopy revealed that the majority of parasitophorous vacuoles were in the process of forming a distinct cyst wall through accumulation of granular material at the periphery of the vacuole, and parasites exhibited the typical features of bradyzoites. These findings demonstrate the usefulness of this culture technique as a promising way to study tachyzoite-to-bradyzoite stage conversion in N. caninum in vitro.
Publisher: American Society of Parasitologists
Date: 12-2004
DOI: 10.1645/GE-359R
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 02-2004
Publisher: Oxford University Press (OUP)
Date: 25-09-2020
DOI: 10.1002/BJS.12050
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 04-2002
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 17-12-2020
DOI: 10.1111/CODI.15431
Abstract: This study aimed to describe the change in surgical practice and the impact of SARS‐CoV‐2 on mortality after surgical resection of colorectal cancer during the initial phases of the SARS‐CoV‐2 pandemic. This was an international cohort study of patients undergoing elective resection of colon or rectal cancer without preoperative suspicion of SARS‐CoV‐2. Centres entered data from their first recorded case of COVID‐19 until 19 April 2020. The primary outcome was 30‐day mortality. Secondary outcomes included anastomotic leak, postoperative SARS‐CoV‐2 and a comparison with prepandemic European Society of Coloproctology cohort data. From 2073 patients in 40 countries, 1.3% (27/2073) had a defunctioning stoma and 3.0% (63/2073) had an end stoma instead of an anastomosis only. Thirty‐day mortality was 1.8% (38/2073), the incidence of postoperative SARS‐CoV‐2 was 3.8% (78/2073) and the anastomotic leak rate was 4.9% (86/1738). Mortality was lowest in patients without a leak or SARS‐CoV‐2 (14/1601, 0.9%) and highest in patients with both a leak and SARS‐CoV‐2 (5/13, 38.5%). Mortality was independently associated with anastomotic leak (adjusted odds ratio 6.01, 95% confidence interval 2.58–14.06), postoperative SARS‐CoV‐2 (16.90, 7.86–36.38), male sex (2.46, 1.01–5.93), age years (2.87, 1.32–6.20) and advanced cancer stage (3.43, 1.16–10.21). Compared with prepandemic data, there were fewer anastomotic leaks (4.9% versus 7.7%) and an overall shorter length of stay (6 versus 7 days) but higher mortality (1.7% versus 1.1%). Surgeons need to further mitigate against both SARS‐CoV‐2 and anastomotic leak when offering surgery during current and future COVID‐19 waves based on patient, operative and organizational risks.
Publisher: Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Date: 17-04-2009
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 02-2008
DOI: 10.1016/J.IJPARA.2007.10.008
Abstract: Neospora caninum naturally infects many mammal species, but has not previously been demonstrated in birds. We examined sera for N. caninum antibodies from 200 outdoor chickens and from 200 chickens confined indoors in the state of Bahia, Brazil. Seroprevalence was greater in outdoor chickens (23.5% versus 1.5%, P<0.001). PCR testing for N. caninum was positive in six of 10 seropositive chickens. Amplicons from two of these were sequenced and had 97-98% nucleotide identity with N. caninum. This finding extends the list of intermediate hosts of N. caninum to include birds and may have important epidemiological consequences.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 02-2008
DOI: 10.1016/J.VETPAR.2007.11.002
Abstract: Neospora caninum has recently been shown to be a cause of abortions of sheep in New Zealand. A commercially available enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was validated for use in sheep with sera from experimentally infected sheep. A cut-off threshold was established that demonstrated sero-conversion between 7 and 14 days post-infection. Higher inocula led to earlier sero-conversion. This ELISA was applied to 640 sera collected from rams across New Zealand and 0.625% (+/-0.61%) (4/640) were shown to be serologically positive. The four positive sera were also demonstrated to be positive by indirect fluorescent antibody test (IFAT). The ELISA evaluated here lends itself more readily to large-scale investigations than IFAT. The low background of N. caninum infection in the New Zealand sheep population suggests that N. caninum abortions could be more easily diagnosed by serological means than in populations with higher background sero-prevalence.
Publisher: JSTOR
Date: 08-1997
DOI: 10.2307/3284241
Publisher: JSTOR
Date: 12-1997
DOI: 10.2307/3284363
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 10-1999
DOI: 10.1016/S0020-7519(99)00130-7
Abstract: Neospora caninum is a recently identified apicomplexan protozoan parasite that is closely related to Toxoplasma gondii. Neospora caninum is of significant economic importance as it causes neurological disease and abortion in numerous animals. Antibodies to BAG1/hsp30 (also known as BAG5), a T. gondii bradyzoite-specific protein, have been demonstrated to react with N. caninum tissue cysts in vivo. Bradyzoite differentiation of N. caninum in vitro was investigated using culture conditions previously utilised for T. gondii in vitro bradyzoite development. Utilising the NC-Liverpool isolate of N. caninum, cyst-like structures developed within 3-4 days of culture of this parasite in human fibroblasts. In addition, an antigen reacting with mAb 74.1.8 (anti-BAG1) and rabbit anti-recombinant BAGI was demonstrable by immunofluorescence, fluorescence-activated cell sorter, and immunoblot analyses. Expression of this antigen was increased by stress conditions, similar to that which has been described for T. gondii bradyzoite induction. Cyst-wall formation in vitro, as assayed by lectin binding, did not occur as readily for N. caninum as it does for T. gondii.
Publisher: American Society of Parasitologists
Date: 12-2002
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 08-2005
DOI: 10.1016/J.VETPAR.2005.05.005
Abstract: The gene for a dense granule protein (NcGRA6) of Neospora caninum was expressed in Escherichia coli as a His-tag fusion protein and purified by NiNTA affinity chromatography. In a preliminary study, high binding of antibodies from N. caninum-negative cows was observed in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using NiNTA-purified NcGRA6. Analysis of NiNTA eluates revealed a significant number of E. coli proteins that co-purified with recombinant NcGRA6. In an attempt to improve the relative sensitivity and specificity of the NcGRA6-based ELISA, the rNcGRA6 eluates were subjected to a secondary purification using reverse phase-high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC). Analysis of RP-HPLC eluates by SDS-PAGE/silver staining revealed the purification of recombinant NcGRA6 from contaminating E. coli proteins. ELISAs using the RP-HPLC purified NcGRA6 (dELISA) or singly purified NcGRA6 (sELISA) for identifying seropositive and seronegative cows in a beef herd experiencing an epidemic outbreak of neosporosis were compared to standard assays based on native tachyzoite protein-immunofluorescence antibody test, immunoblot assay, and ISCOM-ELISA. The relative sensitivity, specificity, and kappa value of the NcGRA6d-ELISA were greatly improved over the NcGRA6s-ELISA when compared to the three native antigen immunoassays. These results indicate that removal of contaminating E. coli proteins improves the performance of recombinant NcGRA6 ELISA in diagnosing bovine neosporosis, and may have applicability to the use of recombinant proteins in diagnosing other infectious agents.
Publisher: American Society for Microbiology
Date: 09-2008
DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00488-08
Abstract: Yersinia pestis , the causative agent of plague, has been well studied at the molecular and genetic levels, but little is known about the role that host genes play in combating this highly lethal pathogen. We challenged several inbred strains of mice with Y. pestis and found that BALB/cJ mice are highly resistant compared to susceptible strains such as C57BL/6J. This resistance was observed only in BALB/cJ mice and not in other BALB/c substrains. Compared to C57BL/6J mice, the BALB/cJ strain exhibited reduced bacterial burden in the spleen and liver early after infection as well as lower levels of serum interleukin-6. These differences were evident 24 h postinfection and became more pronounced with time. Although a significant influx of neutrophils in the spleen and liver was exhibited in both strains, occlusive fibrinous thrombi resulting in necrosis of the surrounding tissue was observed only in C57BL/6J mice. In an effort to identify the gene(s) responsible for resistance, we measured total splenic bacteria in 95 F 2 mice 48 h postinfection and performed quantitative trait locus mapping using 58 microsatellite markers spaced throughout the genome. This analysis revealed a single nonrecessive plague resistance locus, designated prl1 ( p lague r esistance l ocus 1 ), which coincides with the major histocompatibility complex of chromosome 17. A second screen of 95 backcrossed mice verified that this locus confers resistance to Y. pestis early in infection. Finally, eighth generation backcrossed mice harboring prl1 were found to maintain resistance in the susceptible C57BL/6J background. These results identify a novel genetic locus in BALB/cJ mice that confers resistance to Y. pestis .
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 07-2014
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 12-2007
DOI: 10.1016/J.IJPARA.2007.05.012
Abstract: Whilst it is presumed that infection of pregnant cattle with Neospora caninum oocysts can provoke abortion and is the likely cause of epidemic abortion outbreaks, only two previous experiments have involved inoculation of pregnant cows with oocysts (and only one abortion was provoked in 22 pregnancies). Here, we describe the oral oocyst challenge of 18 cows synchronously bred and inoculated precisely at 70 (n=6), 120 (n=6) and 210 (n=6) days in pregnancy with a nominal dose of 40,000 oocysts. Only one abortion occurred (at the 120 days challenge) which could be definitively ascribed to N. caninum and no transplacental infection (TPI) was detected in any of the other 11 calves born in the 70 and 120 day challenge groups. In contrast, 4/5 live calves born to cattle challenged at 210 days were transplacentally infected. When cows which had transplacentally infected their calves in the first pregnancy were rebred, no TPI occurred. The results show that the timing of challenge influences clinical and parasitological outcomes and that cattle in late pregnancy are exquisitely sensitive to oocyst challenge leading to exogenous TPI and congenitally infected calves. However, cattle which were indisputably systemically infected in their first pregnancy did not induce endogenous TPI in their subsequent pregnancy. This confirms previous results with experimental tachyzoite challenge and suggests that post-natal infection does not lead to persisting infections which can recrudesce in pregnancy.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 06-1999
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 07-2021
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 07-2002
DOI: 10.1016/S0020-7519(02)00094-2
Abstract: Neospora caninum is a protozoan parasite of animals, which before 1984 was misidentified as Toxoplasma gondii. Infection by this parasite is a major cause of abortion in cattle and causes paralysis in dogs. Since the original description of N. caninum in 1988, considerable progress has been made in the understanding of its life cycle, biology, genetics and diagnosis. In this article, the authors redescribe the parasite, distinguish it from related coccidia, and provide accession numbers to its type specimens deposited in museums.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 10-2001
DOI: 10.1016/S0304-4017(01)00493-9
Abstract: Neospora caninum was isolated from the brain of an adult dog in Brazil. Cerebral tissue from the dog was inoculated into Mongolian gerbils. Gerbils were euthanized 3-4 months later and bradyzoite-containing tissue cysts were observed in their brains. N. caninum (designated NC-Bahia) was isolated in cell culture after inoculation with tissue cysts from the gerbils. The identity of the parasite was confirmed by immunohistochemical examination and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Gerbils may be a useful alternative to immunosuppressed mice for isolation of N. caninum and for production of encysted bradyzoites.
Publisher: American Society for Microbiology
Date: 06-2017
DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00173-17
Abstract: Toxoplasma gondii and Neospora caninum (both Apicomplexa) are closely related cyst-forming coccidian parasites that differ significantly in their host ranges and ability to cause disease. Unlike eutherian mammals, Australian marsupials (metatherian mammals) have long been thought to be highly susceptible to toxoplasmosis and neosporosis because of their historical isolation from the parasites. In this study, the carnivorous fat-tailed dunnart ( Sminthopsis crassicaudata ) was used as a disease model to investigate the immune response and susceptibility to infection of an Australian marsupial to T. gondii and N. caninum . The disease outcome was more severe in N. caninum -infected dunnarts than in T. gondii -infected dunnarts, as shown by the severity of clinical and histopathological features of disease and higher tissue parasite burdens in the tissues evaluated. Transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) of spleens from infected dunnarts and mitogen-stimulated dunnart splenocytes was used to define the cytokine repertoires. Changes in mRNA expression during the time course of infection were measured using quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (qRT-PCR) for key Th1 (gamma interferon [IFN-γ] and tumor necrosis factor alpha [TNF-α]), Th2 (interleukin 4 [IL-4] and IL-6), and Th17 (IL-17A) cytokines. The results show qualitative differences in cytokine responses by the fat-tailed dunnart to infection with N. caninum and T. gondii . Dunnarts infected with T. gondii were capable of mounting a more effective Th1 immune response than those infected with N. caninum , indicating the role of the immune response in the outcome scenarios of parasite infection in this marsupial mammal.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 09-2005
DOI: 10.1016/J.VETPAR.2005.07.003
Abstract: One of the most compelling topics to emerge from the last decade of veterinary protozoology is disease caused by a zoonotic pathogen, Toxoplasma gondii, in otherwise healthy people. These findings may catch the health professions by surprise, because veterinary and medical courses and textbooks typically emphasize that T. gondii infections are subclinical, unless acquired in utero or the patient has a serious immunosuppressive condition. Nevertheless, numerous reports in the last decade associate toxoplasmosis with lymphadenopathy, fever, weakness and debilitation, ophthalmitis, and severe multisystemic infections in people who do not have immunosuppressive conditions. Toxoplasmosis in rodents causes altered behavior, and similar mental aberrations are coming to light in humans recent studies associate T. gondii infection with personality shifts and increased likelihood of reduced intelligence or schizophrenia. These conditions reduce the quality of life of in iduals, and may exact a significant economic burden upon society. Of course, toxoplasmosis continues to cause serious conditions in AIDS patients and congenitally infected people, as well as abortions and encephalitis in domestic and wild animals. Environmental contamination is heavy enough to extend into marine wildlife. It is time for the health professions to amend teaching curricula regarding T. gondii. Veterinary parasitologists should lead the way in developing methods to reduce the prevalence of T. gondii in food animals. Public health policies should prohibit the practice of allowing pet cats to roam. Organizations and in iduals that feed feral cats are unwittingly contributing to the dissemination of T. gondii, by sustaining artificially dense populations of a definitive host of this protozoal parasite.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 12-2002
DOI: 10.1016/S1471-4922(02)02414-5
Abstract: Since its first description in dogs in 1984, the protozoan parasite Neospora caninum has been found to infect a wide range of animals, worldwide. In cattle, N. caninum has particular significance as a cause of abortion in which persistence of infection in the mother, recrudescence of the parasite during pregnancy, and the vulnerability of the placenta and foetus to invasion are important features. This article discusses how Neospora invades cells, how it infects and causes disease in several animal species, and particularly how it has evolved a special niche in cattle and dogs that ensures its survival.
Publisher: Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Date: 28-01-2014
DOI: 10.1017/S0031182013002060
Abstract: Effective vaccines are available for many protozoal diseases of animals, including vaccines for zoonotic pathogens and for several species of vector-transmitted apicomplexan haemoparasites. In comparison with human diseases, vaccine development for animals has practical advantages such as the ability to perform experiments in the natural host, the option to manufacture some vaccines in vivo , and lower safety requirements. Although it is proper for human vaccines to be held to higher standards, the enduring lack of vaccines for human protozoal diseases is difficult to reconcile with the comparatively immense amount of research funding. Common tactical problems of human protozoal vaccine research include reliance upon adapted rather than natural animal disease models, and an overwhelming emphasis on novel approaches that are usually attempted in replacement of rather than for improvement upon the types of designs used in effective veterinary vaccines. Currently, all effective protozoal vaccines for animals are predicated upon the ability to grow protozoal organisms. Because human protozoal vaccines need to be as effective as animal vaccines, researchers should benefit from a comparison of existing veterinary products and leading experimental vaccine designs. With this in mind, protozoal vaccines are here reviewed.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 10-1999
DOI: 10.1016/S0020-7519(99)00103-4
Abstract: Dogs are a definitive host of Neospora caninum and cattle are intermediate hosts. Alternative life-cycles have not been investigated. Foxes are frequently seropositive, but may not commonly prey upon cattle therefore, other intermediate hosts may exist that are frequent prey of foxes. Three domestic pigeons (Columbia livia) and three zebra finches (Poephila guttata) were inoculated with N. caninum tachyzoites, to determine if they could serve as intermediate hosts. Tissue culture, PCR, serology, and histology were all positive for one or more pigeons. All finches resisted infection. Further testing of columbiform birds as intermediate hosts of N. caninum is warranted.
Publisher: American Society of Parasitologists
Date: 12-2013
DOI: 10.1645/13-280.1
Abstract: Abstract : Oral administration of Toxoplasma gondii oocysts to cats (i.e., monoxenous transmission) typically induces patent infections in fewer than half of test subjects. In the present study, oral administration of T. gondii oocysts to 5 kittens induced a patent infection in 2 of them, but only 1 kitten shed enough oocysts to enable further study. Those monoxenously-produced oocysts were administered to another kitten, which produced a second generation of monoxenous oocysts, and then those were used to induce a third generation of monoxenous oocysts. These results provide a rationale to develop a strain of T. gondii that has efficient direct transmission. The isolate of T. gondii that was able to be passaged in this manner has been designated the Dubey strain and cultured tachyzoites have been donated to a repository.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 04-1992
DOI: 10.1016/0021-9975(92)90055-Y
Abstract: Polioencephalomalacia (PEM) was induced in four of 10 lambs by the administration of a sulphide solution into the oesophagus at 20 min intervals for a period of 40 to 120 min. Signs of neurological dysfunction occurred in all 10 lambs during that time and included stupor, visual impairment and seizures. Gross autofluorescent and microscopic lesions in cerebrocortical grey matter were present as soon as 20 h after sulphide administration and were indistinguishable from lesions in naturally occurring disease. These findings, when considered together with an earlier study that revealed an association between high ruminal concentrations of sulphide and PEM, indicate that this disease can result from sulphide toxicosis, independent of the metabolic status of thiamine.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 04-1999
DOI: 10.1016/S0304-4017(99)00017-5
Abstract: Pregnant ewes inoculated with cultured Neospora caninum tachyzoites in 1995, 1996, or 1995 and 1996 aborted or delivered weak or clinically normal lambs in 1996. Nine of 11 ewes in the study had previously produced infected lambs or fetuses after being experimentally infected in 1995. Fetuses and lambs produced in 1996 showed histologic lesions and zoites indicative of Neospora. Serologic responses and production of infected fetuses/lambs indicated systemic neosporosis in the ewes during gestation, although tachyzoites could not be cultured from maternal tissues. The repetitive infection of fetuses, and resulting clinical and histopathologic findings in the present study are similar to those reported in naturally infected cattle, adding to the already established similarities of neosporosis between sheep and cattle.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 03-2005
DOI: 10.1016/J.VETPAR.2004.11.030
Abstract: The avidity (functional affinity) of specific antibodies are being used to estimate duration of bovine Neospora caninum infection. Here, we report for the first time the avidity pattern in cattle orally inoculated with N. caninum oocysts. In all, 16 pregnant cows and 7 calves were administered N. caninum oocysts. In the cows, the avidity increased during the early course of infection. In all but one, the avidity was 50 until week 9. The calves were s led either week 6 (n = 3) or week 9 (n = 9) after infection, and by then had avidities between 2 and 17. The results are in agreement with results from previous investigations of naturally infected cattle, and calves that were experimentally infected with tachyzoites. They further validate the ability of the N. caninum iscom avidity ELISA to accurately assess the duration of infection.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 12-2020
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 07-2016
DOI: 10.1016/J.CVFA.2016.01.012
Abstract: Neosporosis is one of the most common and widespread causes of bovine abortion. The causative parasite is transmitted in at least two ways, horizontally from canids, and by endogenous transmission within maternal lines of infected cattle. The prevalence of neosporosis is higher in the dairy industry than in the beef industry because of risk factors associated with intensive feeding. There are no vaccines, but logical management options are discussed that can lower the risk of abortion outbreaks and gradually reduce the prevalence of infection within herds. Steps should be taken to prevent total mixed rations from becoming contaminated by canine feces. If a herd has a high rate of infection that is associated with abortions in heifers, then the rate of reduction of infection prevalence can be speeded by only selecting seronegative replacement heifers to enter the breeding herd. Elimination of all infected cattle is not a recommended goal.
Publisher: American Society of Parasitologists
Date: 12-2004
DOI: 10.1645/GE-341R
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 2021
Publisher: JSTOR
Date: 04-1996
DOI: 10.2307/3284181
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 22-09-2000
DOI: 10.1007/PL00008514
Abstract: A recently published opinion that Hammondia heydorni, Neospora caninum, and N. hughesi are a single species is not supported by genetic comparisons. Furthermore, the suggestion that oocysts shed by dogs after experimental infection with N. caninum might have been of another organism is not consistent with the finding that these oocysts induced N. caninum infections in mice.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 09-1998
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Date: 03-2004
DOI: 10.1354/VP.41-2-164
Abstract: Abomasal emptying defect (AED) is a disease syndrome that primarily affects Suffolk sheep and is characterized by distension and impaction of the abomasum. No histologic lesion has been consistently associated with this condition. There is no known etiology. In this study, nine cases of AED were identified by necropsy, including three rams and six ewes between 2 and 6 years of age. Four of the cases occurred sporadically, and five ewes were submitted on the same day from a single flock. Histologic examination of celiacomesenteric ganglia from six of the affected sheep revealed scattered chromatolytic or necrotic neurons, without inflammation. Chromatolytic neurons were observed more frequently in AED-affected sheep than in seven healthy Suffolk sheep ( P 0.08, weak statistical support). Neuronal necrosis was not observed in any of the healthy sheep. Lineage records of the flock that suffered an outbreak were incompatible with the possibility of a simple inheritance pattern for this disease furthermore, the very occurrence of AED in outbreak form is inconsistent with transmission solely by inheritance. Only one of the six tested sheep showed concurrent immunohistochemical evidence of scrapie. The lesion pattern in celiacomesenteric ganglia is suggestive of a neurotoxicosis. Neuronal lesions of AED resemble dysautonomic diseases of humans and other animals.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 10-1999
DOI: 10.1016/S0020-7519(99)00098-3
Abstract: Dogs are a definitive host of Neospora caninum, a protozoal parasite that causes abortion in cattle. Mustelids were tested to determine if they could also be definitive hosts. The procedures used were the same as those previously used to test dogs. Ermine (Mustela erminea), weasels (Mustela frenata) and ferrets (Mustela putorius) were fed N. caninum-infected mice. Neospora caninum oocysts were not observed. Mustelid faeces were fed to mice. The mice did not seroconvert and N. caninum was not detected in murine brains using tissue culture and PCR. The hypothesis that Mustela spp. are definitive hosts of N. caninum is not supported.
Publisher: American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA)
Date: 09-2000
DOI: 10.2460/JAVMA.2000.217.881
Abstract: Objective —To determine whether cows with evidence of previous infection with Neospora caninum were less likely to abort or give birth prematurely during an outbreak of neosporosis, compared with herdmates with evidence of primary infection. Design —Cohort study. Animals —208 pregnant beef cows. Procedure —Aborted fetuses and calves born prematurely were examined during an outbreak of neosporosis in a herd of beef cows. Sera were collected from all cows during the outbreak and again 71 days later. Cows were classified into groups on the basis of normal and abnormal reproductive outcomes. Sera were examined, using an avidity ELISA procedure for N caninum , and results were compared between groups and among time points. Results —Antibody concentrations decreased significantly and IgG avidity values increased significantly over time. During the outbreak, cows with normal reproductive outcomes were significantly more likely to have high IgG avidity values than cows with abnormal reproductive outcomes. Conclusions and Clinical Relevance —The herd had numerous abortions and premature births with evidence of recent point-source exposure to N caninum . Therefore, to reduce risk of transmission of N caninum to cattle, attempts should be made to prevent canine feces from contaminating feed, especially feedstuffs used to prepare mixed rations for cattle. Cows with evidence of previous exposure to N caninum were less likely to abort or give birth prematurely during the outbreak than cows with primary infections with N caninum this finding suggests development of protective immunity in previously infected cows. ( J Am Vet Med Assoc 2000 :881–887)
Publisher: American Society of Parasitologists
Date: 02-2004
DOI: 10.1645/GE-134R
Publisher: American Society of Parasitologists
Date: 08-2005
DOI: 10.1645/GE-407R.1
Publisher: American Society of Parasitologists
Date: 12-2002
Publisher: American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Date: 2021
DOI: 10.1200/JCO.20.01933
Abstract: As cancer surgery restarts after the first COVID-19 wave, health care providers urgently require data to determine where elective surgery is best performed. This study aimed to determine whether COVID-19–free surgical pathways were associated with lower postoperative pulmonary complication rates compared with hospitals with no defined pathway. This international, multicenter cohort study included patients who underwent elective surgery for 10 solid cancer types without preoperative suspicion of SARS-CoV-2. Participating hospitals included patients from local emergence of SARS-CoV-2 until April 19, 2020. At the time of surgery, hospitals were defined as having a COVID-19–free surgical pathway (complete segregation of the operating theater, critical care, and inpatient ward areas) or no defined pathway (incomplete or no segregation, areas shared with patients with COVID-19). The primary outcome was 30-day postoperative pulmonary complications (pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome, unexpected ventilation). Of 9,171 patients from 447 hospitals in 55 countries, 2,481 were operated on in COVID-19–free surgical pathways. Patients who underwent surgery within COVID-19–free surgical pathways were younger with fewer comorbidities than those in hospitals with no defined pathway but with similar proportions of major surgery. After adjustment, pulmonary complication rates were lower with COVID-19–free surgical pathways (2.2% v 4.9% adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 0.62 95% CI, 0.44 to 0.86). This was consistent in sensitivity analyses for low-risk patients (American Society of Anesthesiologists grade 1/2), propensity score–matched models, and patients with negative SARS-CoV-2 preoperative tests. The postoperative SARS-CoV-2 infection rate was also lower in COVID-19–free surgical pathways (2.1% v 3.6% aOR, 0.53 95% CI, 0.36 to 0.76). Within available resources, dedicated COVID-19–free surgical pathways should be established to provide safe elective cancer surgery during current and before future SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks.
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Date: 07-2001
DOI: 10.1354/VP.38-4-372
Abstract: Hemochromatosis is rare in domestic mammals. Five clinical cases and one preclinical case of hemochromatosis were diagnosed in Salers and Salers-cross cattle. Clinical disease developed between 9 and 22 months of age. Animals were healthy until weaning but then lost weight, developed rough hair coats, and lost incisor teeth. In two animals, hemochromatosis was identified by liver biopsy, biochemical evidence of hepatic injury, and/or elevated transferrin saturation values. At necropsy, carcasses were thin, with firm dark brown livers and lymph nodes, soft bones, and brown-colored small bowel. The principal histologic changes were hepatocellular siderosis and periportal, bridging, and perivenular fibrosis. Siderocalcinosis involved collagen, elastin, reticulin, and basement membrane components in liver, lymph nodes, spleen, duodenum, and kidney. Hepatic iron concentrations in clinically affected cattle were 1,500–10,500 μg/g wet weight (reference range for cattle = μg/g). Ultrastructurally, the heaviest intrahepatic deposition was in hepatocytes, which contained large intracytoplasmic siderosomes. Iron deposition in bone was associated with osteopenia. Genetic analysis indicated a common ancestral bull in the pedigrees of five of six affected cattle no pedigree was available for the remaining animal. Four dams of five affected animals were phenotypically normal and had histologically normal livers. Test mating of four cows to the ancestral bull resulted in a female calf that developed clinicopathologic and histologic evidence of preclinical hemochromatosis by 40 days of age. It was not possible to establish the pattern of inheritance because of the small number of pedigrees from affected cattle.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 26-10-2016
DOI: 10.1111/AVJ.12516
Abstract: A 17-day-old Bulldog puppy died soon after presentation for weakness and tachypnoea. Gross lesions included diffuse pulmonary oedema and a region of myocardial pallor that resembled an infarct. Inflammation was observed histopathologically in many organs, with numerous clusters of intracellular protozoa that stained positively using Neospora caninum immunohistochemistry. Myocarditis was severe and had associated necrosis of in idual myocytes, but the tissue was not infarcted. The bitch had an antibody titre of 1 : 1600 for N. caninum. All six littermates were sold and reported to be healthy at 6 months of age. Unusual aspects of this case include the occurrence of clinical disease in only 1 of 7 neonatal puppies, widespread dissemination of the organism in multiple tissues, and regional pallor associated with myocarditis that gave a false gross appearance of infarction. This report also adds Bulldogs to the list of dog breeds shown to be susceptible to clinical neosporosis.
Publisher: JSTOR
Date: 04-1997
DOI: 10.2307/3284465
Publisher: American Society of Parasitologists
Date: 02-2009
DOI: 10.1645/GE-1710.1
Publisher: Korean Society for Parasitology
Date: 2007
DOI: 10.3347/KJP.2007.45.4.295
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to investigate whether sporulated Neospora caninum oocysts, which had been stored for 46 mo in a 2% sulfuric acid solution at 4 degrees C, remain morphologically viable and infective to gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus). Six gerbils were orally inoculated with doses of 400 or 1,200 oocysts. Two mo after inoculation, the animals did not show any clinical signs, had no histological lesions, and were seronegative for N. caninum at 1: 50 in an immunofluorescent antibody test. PCR using the brain from each gerbil did not reveal N. caninum specific DNA. We conclude that oocysts preserved for 46 mo are not infective, despite being morphologically intact.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 10-2005
DOI: 10.1016/J.VETPAR.2005.04.042
Abstract: Tissue stages similar to those of Sarcocystis neurona, the causative agent of equine protozoal myeloencephalitis, were identified in skeletal muscles of a dog. The dog, a 6-year-old Labrador retriever, was seropositive for Toxoplasma gondii infection and euthanized due to a history of polymyositis and progressive muscular atrophy. Histologically, 30, variably sized, microscopic, intracellular sarcocysts were observed in 60 sections of skeletal muscles taken from the neck, fore limbs and hind limbs. The cysts were only observed in inflamed skeletal muscles, but were mostly in myocytes at the periphery of areas infiltrated with leukocytes. Ultrastructurally, the cyst wall had villar protrusions consistent with sarcocysts. Immunohistochemistry with monoclonal S. neurona antibodies demonstrated positive labeling of zoites in merozoites or schizonts in the skeletal muscle interstitium, but no labeling of the sarcocysts. Initial PCR analysis with primers lifying a genetic sequence encoding Apicomplexan 18s rRNA, and subsequent PCR analysis with differentiating primers indicated that the genetic sequences had 100% identity with sequences reported for S. neurona.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 07-2000
DOI: 10.1016/S0020-7519(00)00072-2
Abstract: Since the identification of Neospora caninum in 1984 as a parasite separate from Toxoplasma gondii by Bjerkas et al., and its subsequent characterization and classification in 1988 by Dubey and co-workers, this parasite has attracted increasing attention, primarily as an important causative agent of abortion in cattle and neuromuscular disease in dogs, but also as a complementary model system to T. gondii for investigating the basic biology of intracellular parasitism. During November 11-14, 1999, the COST 820 Annual meeting (Vaccines against coccidioses) took place in Interlaken, Switzerland. Almost half of the papers presented at that meeting were on N. caninum and neosporosis, reflecting the increasing awareness of the importance of this parasite on part of the scientific community in Europe. On the occasion of the meeting, participants in this COST Action involved in Neospora research in Europe were asked to participate in this invited review in order to document the growing interest in N. caninum and the disease it causes. Thus, this paper is a unique collection of contributions provided by several European experts in the field. It is comprised of 10 reviews or original papers on different aspects of Neospora research including epidemiology, immunology, application and development of serological tools, and molecular characterisation of the parasite currently carried out throughout Europe. In addition, two distinguished invited speakers from overseas (Milton McAllister and John Ellis) provided valuable contributions. This invited review demonstrates that the COST 820 Action has brought together scientists from all over Europe and other parts of the world, and has laid the basis for many fruitful collaborations. The studies described here will contribute in assessing the relevance of neosporosis as a potential risk factor not only for animals, but also for human health.
No related grants have been discovered for Milton McAllister.