Publications by authors named "Lluis Lujan"

Article Synopsis
  • Persistent subcutaneous granulomas develop at the injection site after administering aluminium oxyhydroxide (AlOOH), a common vaccine adjuvant, and can facilitate the infection of macrophages by small ruminant lentiviruses (SRLVs) in sheep.
  • The study involved 24 male lambs that underwent vaccination followed by SRLV infection, revealing that the granulomas, initially large, decreased in size over time and exhibited various features including central necrosis and keratin presence.
  • The research highlighted significant differences in the expression of the mannose receptor and the restriction factor A3Z1 in relation to the vaccine type and time, suggesting that macrophage polarization might affect SRLV infection, though the overall structure of the granulomas remained
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Antibiotics, specifically clindamycin (Clin), cause intestinal dysbiosis, reducing the microbiota with anti-inflammatory properties. Furthermore, Clin can induce alterations in the immune responses and oxidative stress. Lactoferrin, among other activities, participates in the maintenance of intestinal homeostasis and reduces dysbiosis induced by antibiotic treatment.

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Aluminum hydroxide has long been employed as a vaccine adjuvant for its safety profile, although its precise mechanism of action remains elusive. In this study, we investigated the transcriptomic responses in sheep spleen following repetitive vaccination with aluminum adjuvanted vaccines and aluminum hydroxide alone. Notably, this work represents the first exploration of the sheep spleen transcriptome in such conditions.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study examines the unique corrugated intimal surface found in the thoracic aorta of sheep, contrasting it with the smooth surface observed in healthy animals.
  • - A total of 24 aortas from various animals were analyzed, and the corrugated pattern was consistently identified in sheep and a goat but was less prominent in cattle.
  • - Histological analysis revealed that the intimal surface in sheep shows bulging areas and muscle islands that disrupt normal structure, but these features are physiological rather than pathological.
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  • * A case study highlights a dog with severe leishmaniosis that developed a massive venous thrombus and renal issues, linked to the formation of circulating immunocomplexes during treatment.
  • * The findings suggest that increased immune response and tissue damage may disrupt blood clotting, indicating a need for further research on the relationship between thrombosis and leishmaniosis in dogs.
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  • Associated abomasitis is identified as a possible cause of sudden death in lambs, but its characteristics are not well understood.
  • A study described severe fibrinonecrotizing abomasitis in three lambs, highlighting pathological features like thickened submucosa, necrotic areas, and the presence of gram-negative coccobacilli.
  • Clostridial co-infection was suggested, with additional complications seen in two lambs, indicating the need to include this condition in differential diagnoses for necrotizing abomasitis in lambs.
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Malakoplakia is a rare chronic granulomatous disease usually affecting the urinary bladder and other locations. In humans, the gastrointestinal tract is the second most common location but there are no reports of intestinal malakoplakia in animals. A 10-month-old female French Bulldog was presented with chronic haemorrhagic diarrhoea and anorexia with normochromic-normocytic anaemia and hypoalbuminaemia.

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Feline osteochondromatosis is a spontaneous osteocartilaginous exostosis associated with feline leukaemia virus (FeLV) infection or due to a frameshift variant in the exostosin glycosyltransferase 1 (EXT1) gene. Osteochondromatosis was diagnosed in an indoor-only, 12-year-old, neutered female, Russian Blue cat. Radiographs revealed bilateral calcified proliferations in the elbow, costochondral and sternochondral joints, which distorted the normal skeletal structure.

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Accumulative evidence has shown that short non-coding RNAs such as miRNAs can regulate the innate and adaptive immune responses. Aluminium hydroxide is a commonly used adjuvant in human and veterinary vaccines. Despite its extended use, its mechanism of action is not fully understood and very few in vivo studies have been done to enhance understanding at the molecular level.

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Extracellular vesicles (EVs) play a crucial role in cell-to-cell communication and have great potential as efficient delivery vectors. However, a better understanding of EV behavior is hampered by the limitations of current imaging tools. In addition, chemical labels present the risk of altering the EV membrane features and, thus, in vivo behavior.

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Background: Platinum nanoparticles have been demonstrated to have excellent anticancer properties. However, because of the lack of specificity they must be delivered to the tumor in amounts sufficient to reach the desired therapeutic objectives. Interestingly, exosomes are considered as excellent natural selective delivery nanotools, but until know their targeting properties have not being combined with the anticancer properties of platinum nanoparticles.

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Regional anesthesia is widely used in peripheral nerve block and in neuraxial anesthesia to reduce anesthetics systemic side effects and shorten recovery times. However, when applied as a single injection (e.g.

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The main current challenges in oncology are (1) avoiding systemic side effects in therapy, and (2) developing alternative treatment strategies for metastatic tumours. Nanomedicine was assumed to provide answers to these issues, but delivering enough therapeutic nanoparticles (NPs) to tumours still remains a huge challenge in nanomaterials-based treatments. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) play a key role in cell communication processes and can be combined with nanomaterials to improve their targeting capabilities.

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Age-related fibrosis in the left ventricle (LV) has been mainly studied in animals by assessing collagen content. Using second-harmonic generation microscopy and image processing, we evaluated amount, aggregation and spatial distribution of LV collagen in young to old pigs, and middle-age and elder living donors. All collagen features increased when comparing adult and old pigs with young ones, but not when comparing adult with old pigs or middle-age with elder individuals.

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In collaboration with the American College of Veterinary Pathologists.

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Background: Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are involved in several immune processes, including the immune response to vaccination, but most of them remain uncharacterised in livestock species. The mechanism of action of aluminium adjuvants as vaccine components is neither not fully understood.

Results: We built a transcriptome from sheep PBMCs RNA-seq data in order to identify unannotated lncRNAs and analysed their expression patterns along protein coding genes.

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Aluminium (Al) hydroxide use as adjuvant induces local formation of long-lasting subcutaneous granulomas in sheep. Macrophages within these granulomas have been identified as a new small ruminant lentivirus (SRLV) replication site in naturally infected animals. Diagnosis of Al hydroxide-induced granulomas in sheep is mostly based on postmortem observations but little information is available on in vivo detection.

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Five adult Saanen goats received a single oral dose of containing 42.25 μg/kg rubiadin (anthraquinone) and 3 adult goats were untreated controls. All goats were exposed to sunlight and sequential ear skin biopsies were collected before treatment and at 32 hours, 3 days, 8 days, and 15 days after treatment.

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Small Ruminant Lentiviruses (SRLV) are highly prevalent retroviruses with significant genetic diversity and antigenic heterogeneity that cause a progressive wasting disease of sheep called Maedi-visna. This work provides a systematic review and meta-analysis of the last 40 years (1981-2020) of scientific publications on SRLV individual and flock prevalence. Fifty-eight publications and 314 studies were included.

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Aluminum (Al) hydroxide is an effective adjuvant used in sheep vaccines. However, Al-adjuvants have been implicated as potential contributors to a severe wasting syndrome in sheep-the so-called ovine autoimmune-inflammatory syndrome induced by adjuvants (ASIA syndrome). This work aimed to characterize the effects of the repetitive injection of Al-hydroxide containing products in lambs.

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Lesions caused by trombiculid mite larvae ('chiggers') in birds have been inadequately described. A juvenile red-legged partridge (Alectoris rufa) presented with multifocal, crater-like lesions of necrotizing dermatitis, which often contained multiple orange mites. Microscopically, there was a nodular necrotizing and pyogranulomatous dermatitis with occasional intralesional arthropods.

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Aluminum (Al)-based salts are widely used adjuvants in ruminants and other species to strengthen the immune response elicited against vaccine antigen(s). However, they can lead to the formation of long-lasting granulomas composed of abundant activated macrophages. Small ruminant lentiviruses (SRLV) are widely distributed macrophage-tropic retroviruses that cause persistent infections in sheep and goats.

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Article Synopsis
  • Aluminium hydroxide adjuvants are widely used in vaccines for livestock and humans, but their effects on the central nervous system are not well-studied.
  • In a study, lambs were treated with various aluminium-containing vaccines, aluminium hydroxide, or mock injections over 16 months, and brain samples were analyzed for gene and miRNA expression.
  • The findings indicated that aluminium hydroxide alone significantly altered brain gene expression, impacting neurological functions and suggesting potential mitochondrial dysfunction, which may require further investigation for possible health implications.
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Wound healing is a complex and costly public health problem that should be timely addressed to achieve a rapid and adequate tissue repair avoiding or even eliminating potential pathogenic infection. Chronic infected non-healing wounds represent a serious concern for health care systems. Efficient wound dressings with tailored therapy having the best response and highest safety margin for the management of chronic non-healing wounds are still needed.

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