60 results match your criteria: "University of Bristol Veterinary School[Affiliation]"

Four conventionally reared goats aged 6 days were inoculated orally with approximately 10(10) colony-forming units (cfu) of a non-verotoxigenic strain of Escherichia coli O157:H7. All remained clinically normal. Tissues were sampled under terminal anaesthesia at 24 (two animals), 48 and 72 h post-inoculation (hpi).

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Feline necrotising sialometaplasia: a report of two cases.

J Feline Med Surg

August 2004

Comparative Pathology Laboratory, Division of Veterinary Pathology, Infection and Immunity, Department of Clinical Veterinary Science, University of Bristol Veterinary School, Langford House, Langford, Bristol BS40 5DU, UK.

Unilateral swelling of submandibular salivary gland in two cats was diagnosed as necrotising sialometaplasia. Histological features that differentiate the disease from other salivary gland lesions, particularly neoplasia are: lobular necrosis of salivary tissue; squamous metaplasia conforming to duct and/or acinar outlines; preservation of salivary lobular morphology; and variable inflammation and granulation tissue.

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Salivary gland basal cell adenocarcinoma: a report of cases in a cat and two dogs.

J Vet Med A Physiol Pathol Clin Med

October 2003

Comparative Pathology Laboratory, Department of Clinical Veterinary Science, Division of Veterinary Pathology, Infection and Immunity, University of Bristol Veterinary School, Langford, Bristol, BS40 5DU, UK.

Basal cell adenocarcinoma of the salivary gland is described in a cat and two dogs; tumour tissue was characterized by cords and islands of epithelial cells with a distinct basal layer. The tumours were stained by various immunohistochemical methods. In addition to positive staining with cytokeratin 14 and pancytokeratin (CKs 5, 6, 8, 17 and 19), there was also staining with Jack bean agglutinin A (ConA) and soya bean agglutinin (SBA); this occurs in many other types of salivary gland tumours and is a feature of normal salivary gland acinar cells.

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Immunohistochemical characteristics of canine aortic and carotid body tumours.

J Vet Med A Physiol Pathol Clin Med

April 2003

Department of Clinical Veterinary Science, University of Bristol Veterinary School, Langford, Bristol, BS40 5DU, UK.

In an immunohistochemical study of 25 canine chemodectomas, 17 tumours were stained with antisera to neurone specific enolase and the same number were stained for synaptophysin; a single tumour was stained for S100. Staining for Ki-67 occurred in 18 cases; the Ki-67-labelling index and the intensity of immunostaining was increased in more pleomorphic and malignant tumours, as assessed on histological grounds. Immunohistochemistry did not aid in recognition of less well-differentiated tumours.

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Attaching and effacing lesions caused by Escherichia coli O157:H7 in experimentally inoculated neonatal lambs.

J Med Microbiol

September 2001

Department of Pathology and Microbiology and *Department of Clinical Veterinary Science, University of Bristol Veterinary School, Langford, Bristol BS40 7DU and †Department of Bacterial Diseases, Veterinary Laboratories Agency (Weybridge), Woodham Lane, New Haw, Addlestone, Surrey KT15 3NB.

Four 6-day-old conventionally reared lambs were inoculated orally with a total of 10(9) cfu comprising equal numbers of four enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) O157:H7 strains. All animals remained clinically normal. Tissues were sampled under terminal anaesthesia at 12, 36, 60 and 84 h post inoculation (hpi).

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Fibrillar deposits, distinct from amyloid deposits, were demonstrated by electron microscopy in the glomeruli and lung of an Amazonian Woolly monkey (Lagothrix lagotricha) which had died with extensive pulmonary haemorrhage. The renal lesions were typical of fibrillary glomerulonephritis in man, and IgG deposition was also demonstrated in the kidney. The association of renal and pulmonary lesions has been reported previously in man, but this is the first report of fibrillary glomerulonephritis, and a pulmonary-renal syndrome, in non-human animals.

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Lectin histochemistry of dog major and minor salivary glands.

Vet Res

January 2000

Department of Pathology and Microbiology, School of Veterinary Science, University of Bristol Veterinary School, Langford, UK.

The distribution of different carbohydrates in dog major and minor salivary glands was investigated using a peroxidase-labelled avidin-biotin method to demonstrate binding of six lectins (Canavalia ensiformis agglutinin [Con A], Dolichos biflorus agglutinin [DBA], Arachis hypogaea (peanut) agglutinin [PNA], Glycine max agglutinin [SBA], Tetragonolobus purpurea agglutinin [TGP] and wheat germ agglutinin [WGA]). With PNA, there was only weak staining in serous acini of parotid glands. Other lectins bound, to different degrees, to different components of the salivary glands; differences could be detected between glands and between binding of different lectins to serous and mucous acinar cells and to the epithelial cell cytoplasm, luminal surface and contents of ducts.

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Escherichia coli O26:K60, with genetic attributes consistent with a potentially human enterohaemorrhagic E. coli was isolated from the faeces of an eight-month-old heifer with dysentery. Attaching and effacing lesions were identified in the colon of a similarly affected heifer examined postmortem, and shown to be associated with E.

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B-cell (CD79a+) lymphoma affecting the tarsal joint synovia in a sheep.

J Comp Pathol

April 1999

Department of Pathology and Microbiology, University of Bristol Veterinary School, Langford, BS40 7DU, UK.

A lymphoma affecting the synovia was identified in both tarsal joints of an aged sheep. With a panel of cross-reactive antibodies specific for lambda and kappa immunoglobulin light chain, MHC class II, CD3, CD79a and the Ki-67 antigen, the neoplasm was classified as a B-cell lymphoma with uniform expression of surface membrane CD79a. This would seem to be the first report of a lymphoma affecting the synovia in a domestic animal, and the first use of the CD79a reagent on ovine tissue.

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An intradural extramedullary tumour, surgically removed from the spinal canal of a young dog with paraplegia, had the histological appearance of a nephroblastoma. Subsequent necropsy revealed no evidence of a renal primary tumour or of any other tumour. Similar tumours of the spinal canal have been described previously under a variety of names, in particular neuroepithelioma.

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Intraclonal mating in Trypanosoma brucei is associated with out-crossing.

Microbiology (Reading)

March 1997

Department of Clinical Veterinary Science, University of Bristol Veterinary School, Langford, Bristol BS18 7DU, UK.

To examine whether mating can occur within as well as between clones of Trypanosoma brucei, we transformed three T. brucei subspecies stocks with heterologous genes conferring resistance to either hygromycin or Geneticin and carried out a series of inter- and intraclone matings in all possible double drug combinations. Double drug-resistant hybrids were recovered from three of the six out-crosses, but not from any of the three intraclone matings.

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The literature relating to feline mycobacterial disease is reviewed and 19 cats with tuberculosis caused by a previously unknown strain of mycobacterium are discussed. The bacteria were found to have characteristics between those of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and M bovis. The paper considers the clinical signs, epidemiology and diagnosis of the cases, and discusses the possible origins of the organism, treatment regimens and zoonotic potential.

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Priapism in seven cats.

J Small Anim Pract

June 1995

Department of Clinical Veterinary Science, University of Bristol Veterinary School, Langford.

Priapism (persistent and painful erection) is an uncommon disorder in cats and dogs. This report describes the clinical and pathological features of seven cases of priapism in cats. Six of the cases were Siamese cats, and in four of them the priapism developed after attempted mating with an oestrus female, despite three of them having been neutered.

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The role of the vertebral arteries in delaying loss of sensibility following neck sticking in slaughter calves was investigated. Vertebral artery blood flow was measured using probes before, during and after electrical stunning and slaughter. Systemic blood pressure, electrocorticogram, visually evoked responses and the occurrence of carotid occlusions were also recorded.

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A successful backcross in Trypanosoma brucei.

Mol Biochem Parasitol

January 1995

Department of Pathology and Microbiology, University of Bristol Veterinary School, Langford, UK.

Genetic exchange can take place between different strains of Trypanosoma brucei ssp. when they are cotransmitted via the tsetse fly vector, but the mechanism and limits of compatibility between strains are ill-defined as yet. Following the recovery of several hybrid genotypes with single drug resistance from a cross of drug resistant parental strains, we attempted a series of backcrosses and F1 crosses, selecting hybrids by double drug resistance.

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The relative DNA contents of representative stocks of 5 groups within the trypanosome subgenus Nannomonas (Trypanosoma simiae, Godfreyi, T. congolense Savannah, Forest and Kilifi) were measured by flow cytometry. The range of DNA contents formed a continuum.

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Genetic exchange in Trypanosoma brucei spp. can occur when two strains are cotransmitted through the tsetse fly vector, but it is non-obligatory and a comparatively rare event. To increase recovery of hybrids, we crossed drug resistant parental strains and selected hybrids by double drug resistance [15].

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Partly obstructing, proliferative mucosal masses in the small intestine of two dogs were shown histologically to be hamartomatous polyps. They were characterized by an extension of smooth muscle from the muscularis mucosae into the lamina propria of the lesion. This is the first report of such lesions in domestic animals.

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Identification of trypanosomes in animals, humans and Glossina.

Bull Soc Pathol Exot

January 1996

Department of Pathology and Microbiology, University of Bristol Veterinary School, Langford, UK.

A number of biochemical methods are now available for the identification of African trypanosomes. The method of choice depends on the number of trypanosomes present in the sample and the taxonomic level required. DNA probes based on repetitive DNA elements allow identification to subgeneric (e.

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A spontaneous bone tumour in the foreleg of a Syrian hamster was shown to be a chondroma; this is only the second report of such a tumour and the first described in detail.

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Genetic exchange in Trypanosoma brucei ssp. can occur when 2 different strains are cotransmitted through the tsetse fly vector. We have introduced heterologous genes for drug resistance (neo or hph) into parental trypanosome lines by electroporation.

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We have developed a sensitive and specific method to identify Trypanosoma brucei gambiense using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to amplify the gene encoding variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) Antat 11.17. The test was capable of distinguishing T.

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Metabolic inhibitors have been used to induce rigor in mammalian muscle fibres previously injected with the Ca(2+)- and Mg(2+)-binding dye arsenazo III. The spectral changes which ensue, after the onset of rigor, indicate that a large increase in intracellular free Ca(2+) occurs (to more than 10(-4)m) but that this is preceded and accompanied by a substantial increase in free Mg(2+) concentration (to 2 mm or more) presumably as a result of the decline in the ATP concentration within the cell. Fibres in rigor have been treated with the divalent cation ionophore A23187 to enable Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) to be extracted selectively from the cell by extracelluar chelating agents.

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Antibodies to the variable antigen type (VAT) designated LiTat 1.3 are common in sera from parasitologically confirmed patients with gambian sleeping sickness. For this reason, LiTat 1.

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Eight vaccinated dogs suddenly developed progressive ataxia, paresis or paralysis of short duration. A histopathological examination revealed a non-suppurative meningoencephalitis suggestive of a viral infection, and immunohistochemical examination confirmed the presence of canine distemper virus antigen in five of the dogs. Distemper had not been suspected from the clinical examination of the dogs.

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