5 results match your criteria: "Pet Clinic ANIHOS[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • Staphylococcus pseudintermedius, a zoonotic bacteria found in pets like dogs and cats, can cause bacterial infections, which led to a study on treating a cat with orbifloxacin for skin wounds.
  • After 80 days of treatment, a resistant strain (novel sequence type ST 2660) was discovered in a severe abscess, showing resistance to multiple antibiotic classes and carrying harmful toxin genes.
  • The isolate demonstrated strong biofilm formation ability at higher temperatures (39 °C), indicating an adaptation to body temperature, and this study marks the first report in Japan identifying the unique virulence of this strain in companion animals.
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Abdominal ultrasonographical and computed tomography examinations of a 12-year-old neutered female toy poodle revealed a protruding mass, approximately 2 cm in diameter, at the apex of the bladder. The mass was firm and haemorrhagic with a homogeneously brownish-yellow cut surface. Microscopically, it was unencapsulated and located in the muscle layer with invasion of the extra-muscular layer.

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Negative MRI findings in a case of degenerative myelopathy in a dog.

J S Afr Vet Assoc

December 2009

Pet Clinic ANIHOS, 1-14-11 Minamitokiwadai, Itabashi, Tokyo 174-0072, Japan.

An 11-year-old male Rough collie was submitted with paraparesis, but did not respond to medical treatment. Clinical signs worsened and the dog displayed paralysis, inability to stand and loss of voluntary bladder control, whereupon magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed. No significant abnormalities were identified from MRI, blood tests, cerebrospinal fluid tests or radiography.

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A 10-year-old female mongrel cat with back pain was brought to the Nihon University Animal Medical Center. Palpation demonstrated a mass in the back region. Radiography revealed partial destruction of the processus spinosus and the arch of the T8 and T9 vertebrae.

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A 7-year-old female cross-breed dog was brought to Nihon University Animal Medical Center for investigation of tetraplegia. Lameness in the pelvic limbs, that had developed 2 weeks previously, had progressed to tetraplegia. On magnetic resonance imaging of the spinal cord, isointensity was detected from C2 to C4 and T12 to T13, isointensity and hyperintensity were intermingled from L3 to L4, and hyperintensity was detected from L5 to L7 by T1-weighted imaging.

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