6 results match your criteria: "Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine Tufts University[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the diversity and transmission dynamics of influenza A viruses (IAV) across different bird species, particularly focusing on gulls and geese in addition to dabbling ducks.
  • It utilizes Bayesian phylodynamic modeling to show how these avian hosts contribute to the spread and evolution of various viral subtypes, especially highlighting the role of gulls in rapid transmission of the highly pathogenic avian influenza H5.
  • The research emphasizes the need for enhanced surveillance efforts in key geographic areas to monitor IAV spread and improve early detection strategies based on the unique movements and immune responses of diverse bird species.
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Influenza A infection has been detected in marine mammals going back to 1975, with additional unconfirmed outbreaks as far back as 1931. Over the past forty years, infectious virus has been recovered on ten separate occasions from both pinnipeds (harbor seal, elephant seal, and Caspian seal) and cetaceans (striped whale and pilot whale). Recovered viruses have spanned a range of subtypes (H1, H3, H4, H7, H10, and H13) and, in all but H1N1, show strong evidence for deriving directly from avian sources.

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Population increases over the past several decades provide natural settings in which to study the evolutionary processes that occur during bottleneck, growth, and spatial expansion. We used parallel natural experiments of historical decline and subsequent recovery in two sympatric pinniped species in the Northwest Atlantic, the gray seal () and harbor seal (), to study the impact of recent demographic change in genomic diversity. Using restriction site-associated DNA sequencing, we assessed genomic diversity at over 8,700 polymorphic gray seal loci and 3,700 polymorphic harbor seal loci in samples from multiple cohorts collected throughout recovery over the past half-century.

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FGF-2 is overexpressed in a subset of invasive bladder carcinomas and its overexpression correlates with poor prognosis. Analyses of publicly available databases addressing the molecular mechanisms that may be responsible for the poor prognosis of these tumors, revealed that FGF-2 expression correlates positively with the expression of EMT-promoting transcription factors and with changes in gene expression that are characteristic of EMT. The same analyses also revealed that FGF-2 correlates negatively with the expression, mutation and copy number variations of FGFR-3, all of which are associated with non-invasive bladder carcinomas.

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Background: The One Health (OH) approach, which seeks to bring together human and animal health, is particularly suited to the effective management of zoonotic diseases across both sectors. To overcome professional silos, OH needs to be taught at the undergraduate level. Here, we describe a problem-based learning activity using the OH approach that was conducted outdoors for 3-year veterinary students in Malaysia.

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Objective: To review complications in dogs with the Zürich cementless total hip arthroplasty (Z-THA) with ≥ 2 year followup, and compare complications between juvenile and adult dogs classified by age (≤ 11 and > 11 months) at the time of original surgery.

Study Design: Retrospective case series.

Animals: Three hundred and twenty-one dogs with 439 total hip arthroplasties.

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