Resultado da pesquisa (24)

Termo utilizado na pesquisa Silva D.

#21 - Uso de fixador esquelético externo Tipo II para osteossíntese de tibiotarso em galinhas da raça Plymouth Rock Branca: modelo experimental para uso em aves selvagens, 199-204

Abstract in English:

ABSTRACT.- De Conti J.B., Schossler J.E.W., Alievi M.M., Bonfada A.T., Novosad D., Silva D. & Pachaly J.R. 2007. [Use of Type II external skeletal fixator for tibiotarsus osteosynthesis in White Plymouth Rock chickens: An experimental model for using in wild birds.] Uso de fixador esquelético externo Tipo II para osteossíntese de tibiotarso em galinhas da raça Plymouth Rock Branca: modelo experimental para uso em aves selvagens. Pesquisa Veterinária Brasi-leira 27(5):199-204. Curso de Medicina Veterinária, Universidade Estadual de Maringá, Estrada da Paca s/n, Zona Rural, Umuarama, PR 87502-000, Brazil. E-mail: julianodeconti@yahoo.com.br The efficiency of the Type II external skeletal fixator for the treatment of tibiotarsus fracture in eight adult White Plymouth Rock chickens was evaluated. The individuals were pre-medicated with morphine sulfate and anesthetized with halothane, and submitted to a diaphysary osteotomy in the left tibiotarsus, performed with an oscillatory saw. Four Kirschner wires were inserted through the bone cortices, being two proximally and two distally to the fracture. After the fracture reduction the ends of both proximal and distal wires were twisted in distal or proximal direction, respectively, being the wires connected by two bars of autopolymerizing acrylic resin, in the external lateral and medial faces of the limb. The return to full capability to use the member was observed in 20.00±7.09 days, and the bone healing occurred in 35.12±8.72 days. The results of this study showed that open reduction and use of Type II external skeletal fixator is an effective method for the treatment of tibiotarsus fractures in White Plymouth Rock chickens.

Abstract in Portuguese:

ABSTRACT.- De Conti J.B., Schossler J.E.W., Alievi M.M., Bonfada A.T., Novosad D., Silva D. & Pachaly J.R. 2007. [Use of Type II external skeletal fixator for tibiotarsus osteosynthesis in White Plymouth Rock chickens: An experimental model for using in wild birds.] Uso de fixador esquelético externo Tipo II para osteossíntese de tibiotarso em galinhas da raça Plymouth Rock Branca: modelo experimental para uso em aves selvagens. Pesquisa Veterinária Brasi-leira 27(5):199-204. Curso de Medicina Veterinária, Universidade Estadual de Maringá, Estrada da Paca s/n, Zona Rural, Umuarama, PR 87502-000, Brazil. E-mail: julianodeconti@yahoo.com.br The efficiency of the Type II external skeletal fixator for the treatment of tibiotarsus fracture in eight adult White Plymouth Rock chickens was evaluated. The individuals were pre-medicated with morphine sulfate and anesthetized with halothane, and submitted to a diaphysary osteotomy in the left tibiotarsus, performed with an oscillatory saw. Four Kirschner wires were inserted through the bone cortices, being two proximally and two distally to the fracture. After the fracture reduction the ends of both proximal and distal wires were twisted in distal or proximal direction, respectively, being the wires connected by two bars of autopolymerizing acrylic resin, in the external lateral and medial faces of the limb. The return to full capability to use the member was observed in 20.00±7.09 days, and the bone healing occurred in 35.12±8.72 days. The results of this study showed that open reduction and use of Type II external skeletal fixator is an effective method for the treatment of tibiotarsus fractures in White Plymouth Rock chickens.


#22 - Plantas tóxicas para ruminantes no Seridó Ocidental e Oriental do Rio Grande do Norte

Abstract in English:

ABSTRACT.- Silva D.M., Riet-Correa F., Medeiros R.M.T. & Oliveira O.F. 2006. [Toxic plants for livestock in the western and eastern Seridó, state of Rio Grande do Norte, in the Brazilian semiarid.] Plantas tóxicas para ruminantes no Seridó Ocidental e Oriental do Rio Grande do Norte. Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira 26(4):223-236. Hospital Veterinário, CSTR, Universidade Federal de Campina Grande, Campus de Patos, 58700-000 Patos, PB, Brazil. E-mail: franklin.riet@pesquisador.com.br To determine the occurrence of plant poisoning in the Western and Eastern Seridó regions of the state of Rio Grande do Norte, 82 persons including farmers, agronomists and veterinarians were interviewed. The two more important toxic plants are Ipomoea asarifolia, which causes nervous signs in sheep, goats and cattle, and Aspidosperma pyrifolium, leading to abortion in goats, sheep and cattle. The abortive properties of this plant had been demonstrated experimentally in goats, but not in sheep and cattle. Some farmers mentioned the poisoning by A. pyrifolium as a cause of nervous signs in equidae and cattle. Poisoning by cyanogenic plants including Manihot spp, Anadenanthera colubrina var. cebil (=Piptadenia macrocarpa), Sorghum bicolor and Sorghum halepense are important in the region. Important is also poisoning by Prosopis juliflora in cattle and with less frequency in goats, poisoning by Crotalaria retusa in horses, sheep and cattle, and by Mascagnia rigida in cattle. Poisoning by Brachiaria decumbens and Enterolobium contortisiliquum is sporadic. Other less important toxic plants in the region are Indigofera suffruticosa, Ipomoea carnea, and Ricinus communis. Some farmers reported poisoning by Marsdenia sp affecting sheep and cattle, and also a group of swine fed with the roots of the plant; the leaves and the roots are experimentally toxic to ruminants causing nervous signs, without histologic lesions. Another poisoning demonstrated experimentally is caused by Tephrosia cinerea and results in ascitis with hepatic fibrosis in sheep. Six farmers reported poisoning by Nerium oleander, always in cattle that had access to the shrub after been cut, mixed or not with other plants. Farmers mentioned also poisoning by other plants with unknown toxicity, including Paullinia sp, Passiflora sp, Dalechampia sp, Portulaca oleracea, Luffa acutangula, Cereus sp, Leersia hexandra, and Stemodia maritima. Echinochloa polystachya and Pennisetum purpureum, which cause nitrite poisoning were mentioned by some farmers as cause of cattle mortalities. One farmer mentioned an outbreak of poisoning in cattle and goats by Dieffenbachia picta which had been cut and left to the animals.

Abstract in Portuguese:

ABSTRACT.- Silva D.M., Riet-Correa F., Medeiros R.M.T. & Oliveira O.F. 2006. [Toxic plants for livestock in the western and eastern Seridó, state of Rio Grande do Norte, in the Brazilian semiarid.] Plantas tóxicas para ruminantes no Seridó Ocidental e Oriental do Rio Grande do Norte. Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira 26(4):223-236. Hospital Veterinário, CSTR, Universidade Federal de Campina Grande, Campus de Patos, 58700-000 Patos, PB, Brazil. E-mail: franklin.riet@pesquisador.com.br To determine the occurrence of plant poisoning in the Western and Eastern Seridó regions of the state of Rio Grande do Norte, 82 persons including farmers, agronomists and veterinarians were interviewed. The two more important toxic plants are Ipomoea asarifolia, which causes nervous signs in sheep, goats and cattle, and Aspidosperma pyrifolium, leading to abortion in goats, sheep and cattle. The abortive properties of this plant had been demonstrated experimentally in goats, but not in sheep and cattle. Some farmers mentioned the poisoning by A. pyrifolium as a cause of nervous signs in equidae and cattle. Poisoning by cyanogenic plants including Manihot spp, Anadenanthera colubrina var. cebil (=Piptadenia macrocarpa), Sorghum bicolor and Sorghum halepense are important in the region. Important is also poisoning by Prosopis juliflora in cattle and with less frequency in goats, poisoning by Crotalaria retusa in horses, sheep and cattle, and by Mascagnia rigida in cattle. Poisoning by Brachiaria decumbens and Enterolobium contortisiliquum is sporadic. Other less important toxic plants in the region are Indigofera suffruticosa, Ipomoea carnea, and Ricinus communis. Some farmers reported poisoning by Marsdenia sp affecting sheep and cattle, and also a group of swine fed with the roots of the plant; the leaves and the roots are experimentally toxic to ruminants causing nervous signs, without histologic lesions. Another poisoning demonstrated experimentally is caused by Tephrosia cinerea and results in ascitis with hepatic fibrosis in sheep. Six farmers reported poisoning by Nerium oleander, always in cattle that had access to the shrub after been cut, mixed or not with other plants. Farmers mentioned also poisoning by other plants with unknown toxicity, including Paullinia sp, Passiflora sp, Dalechampia sp, Portulaca oleracea, Luffa acutangula, Cereus sp, Leersia hexandra, and Stemodia maritima. Echinochloa polystachya and Pennisetum purpureum, which cause nitrite poisoning were mentioned by some farmers as cause of cattle mortalities. One farmer mentioned an outbreak of poisoning in cattle and goats by Dieffenbachia picta which had been cut and left to the animals.


#23 - Experimental type C botulism in goats

Abstract in English:

The present paper describes the subcutaneous inoculation of goats with botulinum toxin type C to determine the doses required to cause various clinical signs, and to evaluate the bioassay as a means of laboratory confirmation of the diagnosis of botulism. Serial double dilutions in doses ranging from 15.6 to 500 DL50/kg were administered to 6 goats. The animals were checked daily to observe development of characteristic signs. Blood and liver samples were collected to detect the toxin by bioassay in mice. Doses of 500 and 250 DL50/kg induced acute botulism, death occurring between 42 and 46 hours post-inoculation, but the toxin was only detected in serum samples taken from the goat which received the larger dose. Animals inoculated with doses of 125, 62.5 and 31.3 DL50/kg developed the sub-acute forro, but the toxin could not be detected in their blood serum. The chronic forro of botulism was observed in those which received 15.6 DL50/kg doses and the toxin could not be demonstrated either in their serum samples. The results confinn that goats are highly susceptible to botulinum type C toxin and that these animals develop the sarne clinical signs as seen in bovines.

Abstract in Portuguese:

O objetivo do presente trabalho foi reproduzir o botulismo em caprinos, induzido pela toxina tipo C e determinar as doses para desenvolver as diferentes formas clínicas, bem como para avaliar a eficácia do bioensaio em camundongos. Foram utilizados 6 caprinos, inoculados por via subcutânea com a toxina tipo C, em doses de 500 a 15,6 DL50/kg de peso vivo, em diluições duplas seriadas. Os animais foram observados quanto ao desenvolvimento de sintomatologia característica de botulismo e amostras de soro sanguíneo e fígado foram coletadas para pesquisa da toxina pelo bioensaio em camundongos. As doses de 500 e 250 DL50/kg induziram quadro agudo de botulismo evoluindo para a morte entre 42 e 46 horas pós-inoculação. A toxina foi detectada somente no soro do animal que recebeu a dose de 500 DL50/kg. Os animais que receberam as doses de 125, 62,5 e 31,3 DL50/kg desenvolveram quadro subagudo da doença, não sendo detectado a toxina nas amostras analisadas. Observou-se quadro crônico de botulismo no animal inoculado com a dose de 15,6 DL50/kg, não se constatando a presença da toxina no soro. Os resultados confirmaram a alta susceptibilidade dos caprinos à toxina botulínica tipo C, que apresentaram quadros clínicos semelhantes aos observados em bovinos.


#24 - Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the detection of botulinum typy D Toxin

Abstract in English:

Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed for detection of botulinum type D toxin. The double antibody sandwich ELISA was performed with reference to botulinum type D antitoxin (Statens Seruminstitut, Denmark) as in the solid phase, to sensitize plastic surface, as in the production of the immunoenzymatic conjugate. The sensitivity of ELISA was evaluated by using various dilutions of botulinum type D toxin added to liquid culture or a pool of normal bovine serum. The reactivity was, respectively, 15.6 LD50\ml and 31.2 LD50\ml for mice, with absorbance measured spectrophotometrically at 450 nm using an ELISA microreader. The specificity was demonstrated by the absence of reactivity with botulinum type A, B and E, tetanic and diphteric toxins. However, botulinum type C toxin indicated a partial cross-reactivity dueto comparable common antigenic determinants between type C and D toxins. Considering the results presented in this paper it can be concluded that the assay is particulary useful as a sensitive, fast and efficient screening method for detection of botulinum type D toxin, but it has the sarne limitations for the direct diagnosis of botulism in cattle as encountered with the bioassay in mice, because of the low concentration of circtilating toxin.

Abstract in Portuguese:

Foi desenvolvido um teste imunoenzimático (ELISA) capaz de detectar toxina botulínica tipo D. A técnica empregada foi a de Duplo Anticorpo (ELISA "Sandwich") utilizando-se antitoxinas botulínicas tipo D de referência (Statens Seruminstitut, Dinamarca) tanto na fase de sensibilização das microplacas de polivinilcloreto como para a produção do conjugado imunoenzimático (antisoro botulínico tipo D ligado à peroxidase). A sensibilidade do teste foi verificada através de titulações de toxina botulínica tipo D em fluidos de cultura e adicionada a "pool" de soro bovino normal, resultando em reatividade correspondendo respectivamente a 15,6 DL50\ml e 31,2 DL50\ml para camundongos, determinada espectrofotometricamente em leitor de microplacas. A especificidade, por sua vez, foi demonstrada pela ausência de reatividade com os diferentes tipos de toxinas botulínicas A, B e E, toxinas tetânica e diftérica. Entretanto, foi observado reatividade cruzada parcial com a toxina botulínica tipo C, devido às semelhanças antigênicas entre as toxinas tipos C e D. A partir dos resultados obtidos, concluiu-se que o referido teste pode ser utilizado como um método de triagem, sensível, rápido e eficaz para a detecção de toxina botulínica tipo D, embora, especificamente para o diagnóstico direto do botulismo do bovino, o método tem as mesmas limitações do bioensaio em camundongos por causa da baixa concentração de toxina circulante.


Colégio Brasileiro de Patologia Animal SciELO Brasil CAPES CNPQ UNB UFRRJ CFMV