Publications by authors named "M V Globokar"

Article Synopsis
  • Toxocara canis and Toxocara cati are parasitic worms found globally, particularly posing risks to children through their eggs in the environment, highlighting the need for effective diagnostic methods for detection.
  • This study compared different detection techniques including a new sequential sieving protocol and a high-throughput qPCR method, evaluating their efficiency on cat and dog faecal samples.
  • Results indicated that the new sieving method was superior in sensitivity for egg detection, while mechanical lysis of DNA samples outperformed enzymatic lysis, and both DNA detection and microscopy methods showed comparable results with newer techniques being cost-effective.
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Canine angiostrongylosis is a potentially lethal parasitic disease that can manifest itself with a broad spectrum of clinical signs, including respiratory distress, neurological and bleeding disorders, or non-specific signs. The occurrence of Angiostrongylus vasorum is widely reported in Europe, but very little is known about its presence in Austria. In this first large-scale survey, 1279 sera were collected from Austrian dogs and tested by an ELISA for the detection of circulating antigen of A.

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We report 2 cases of bilateral lung transplantation for nonresolving coronavirus disease 2019 associated respiratory failure. In the first patient, the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection caused acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring prolonged extracorporeal membrane oxygenation support; in the second patient, coronavirus disease 2019 resulted in irreversible pulmonary fibrosis requiring only ventilatory support. The 2 cases represent the 2 ends of the spectrum showing significant differences in preoperative and postoperative courses.

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Canine cases of relapsing fever (RF) borreliosis have been described in Israel and the USA, where two RF species, and , can cause similar clinical signs to the in dogs and cats reported from Israel, including fever, lethargy, anorexia, thrombocytopenia, and spirochetemia. In this report, we describe the first clinical cases of two dogs and a cat from Spain (Cordoba, Valencia, and Seville) caused by the RF species Spirochetes were present in the blood smears of all three animals, and clinical signs included lethargy, pale mucosa, anorexia, cachexia, or mild abdominal respiration. Laboratory findings, like thrombocytopenia in both dogs, may have been caused by co-infecting pathogens (i.

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A fragment of a Dracunculus-like worm was extracted from the hind limb of a 2-year-old dog from Toledo, Spain. Cytochrome oxidase I and rRNA sequences confirmed an autochthonous mammalian Dracunculus worm infection in Europe. Sequence analyses suggest close relation to a parasite obtained from a North American opossum.

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