An experimental study of East Coast fever in Uganda IV. A study of the East Coast fever reactions produced when infected ticks 171 days old were fed on susceptible calves in limited numbers over a period of 3 weeks

Parasitology ◽  
1951 ◽  
Vol 41 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 36-45
Author(s):  
S. G. Wilson

This experiment showed that infections of Theileria parva were still viable in nymphae of Rhipicephalus appendictdatus 171 days old, but when nine nymphae were fed on calves at intervals over 22 days the reactions produced were most irregular.In group A reactions varied from acute fatal type to mild, doubtful or no obvious reaction. None of the four animals which survived was protected from subsequent infection when grazed in a tick-infested paddock (Table 1). The two fatal reactions which developed in this paddock varied in intensity; calf no. 5717 showing a typical acute East Coast fever reaction, but the reaction of calf no. 167 showed several atypical features especially in the sporadic appearance of Koch's bodies.In group B the reactions were again in marked contrast to those seen in group A, one fatal reaction developed and only mild transient reactions without the production of Koch's bodies were seen in the remaining five calves. These mild reactions, however, appeared to be sufficient to protect against subsequent re-infection in the tick-paddock (Table 4).It is doubtful if the transient reactions seen in calves nos. 5734 (on the 12th day), 172 and 168 could be diagnosed clinically under field conditions, and further investigations as to the infectivity of these types of reactions are required.In calves nos. 165 and 167 Koch's bodies were absent from all tissue smears at time of death, and diagnosis of the true cause of death by smears alone would therefore be difficult. Reactions such as those given by calves 133 and 139 cast further doubt on the ability to diagnose East Coast fever by gland-smear technique.In general, the results of this experiment appear to indicate that if the original reaction is mild a second reaction may develop within a few weeks with or without the production of Koch's bodies. The development of a durable resistance to further attacks may not, therefore, depend on the presence of Koch's bodies in the peripheral glandular tissues in detectable numbers.My thanks are due to the Director of Veterinary Services, Uganda, for his permission to carry out this work and to publish this paper.

Parasitology ◽  
1951 ◽  
Vol 41 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 23-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. G. Wilson

In natural grazing grounds, bovines affected with East Coast fever remain ambulatory until a few days or even a few hours before death, and larval and nymphal Rhipicephalus appendwulatus and R. evertsi, which have fed and engorged, will infest the pasture over a wide area. Subsequently, when susceptible cattle graze over this area small numbers of infected instars may attach at intervals and begin to feed. In this experiment an attempt was made to simulate these conditions as closely as possible.In group A wnere one infected tick was fed on the 1st day, two on the 3rd day, and three on the 21st day, two out of six calves developed an unmistakable East Coast fever infection, with Koch's bodies present in gland smears. In one calf (no. 5724) the reaction was most severe and was undoubtedly due to the three ticks which attached on the 1st and 3rd days, while in another calf (no. 115) the reaction was less severe and was most probably due to the three ticks which attached on the 21st day.In group B where one infected tick was fed on the 1st day, two on the 5th day, and three on the 21st day; five out of six calves gave a definite unmistakable East Coast fever reaction with Koch's bodies present in gland smears, four of the reactions being undoubtedly due to the three ticks which attached on the 1st and 5th days. There is as yet no reasonable explanation as to why the number of definite reactors should differ so markedly in the two groups.It is noteworthy that all these reactions were mild and that recovery in each case was uneventful. The only death to occur was control calf no 5729, on which ten infected ticks had fed at one time, but from the results of the other controls it may be assumed that the strain of Theileria parva had by some means become attenuated or that the calves had increased tolerance or resistance.It is difficult to understand why calf no. 109 failed to react in the first experiment but showed some susceptibility when challenged 96 days later, and why calves nos. 5711, 116, 5642 and 39 gave doubtful reactions. No explanation can be given at this stage, but it raises two practical questions. First, it is difficult to assess the minimum intensity of a reaction which is sufficient to give a durable immunity. The fact that calf no. 114, after what appeared to be a definite T. parva reaction, reacted a second time on exposure to infection 110 days later, proved that the immunity was not prolonged. It is true that the first reaction was only mild, but practically the same remarks could be applied to calves nos. 117 and 5725, yet these calves had not lost their immunity on challenge. Secondly, it is difficult to ensure, by observation of daily temperatures alone, that all calves are really fully susceptible before being used on a critical East Coast fever experiment, for if only a few infected ticks are accidentally introduced into stables or grazing paddocks, it may be assumed that mild subclinical infections will result. These calves may then show varying degrees of resistance to subsequent infections, and results such as those experienced in these experiments would be a normal sequelae.The intensity of the leucopaenia appeared to bear no relationship to the number of days Koch's bodies were present in gland smears. It was present before the first rise in temperature in all the calves except no. 114, the only calf to show a second reaction on challenge.


Parasitology ◽  
1909 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 325-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
George H. F. Nuttall ◽  
H. B. Fantham ◽  
Annie Porter

Although a good deal has been written about East Coast Fever in cattle, the literature relating thereto contains very little direct information regarding the parasite which stands in causal relation to the disease. Robert Koch (1898), who was the first to observe the parasite in cases of East Coast Fever occurring in German East Africa, regarded it as but a variety of Piroplasma bovis (= bigeminum) and described the disease as Texas Fever. Theiler (1904) was the first to distinguish clearly East Coast Fever from Redwater. He stated that “the disease has nothing to do with Texas Fever or Redwater; it is a new disease due to a parasite different to the one found in Texas Fever.” Koch (1903—1904), who gave the disease its distinctive name, reached the same conclusions as Theiler. The investigations of Theiler (1904) established the following facts: Cattle which are immune to Redwater are susceptible to East Coast Fever. East Coast Fever is not communicable by blood inoculations (30 experiments, wherein 5 to 2000 c.c. of East Coast Fever blood were inoculated). He noted the absence of haemoglobinuria in the majority of animals affected with East Coast Fever, its presence in the majority of the animals affected with Redwater. He found that in most cases of East Coast Fever, there was no appreciable decrease in the number of red blood corpuscles, this being in marked contrast to what is observed in Redwater. Theiler noted that cattle might harbour both the parasites of Redwater (P. bovis) and those of East Coast Fever (bacillary forms = T. parva). The former generally appeared in the blood “only towards the end of the fever reaction in East Coast Fever,” being previously latent in the animals which had been “salted” against Redwater. He distinguished “two groups of piroplasmosis,” the inoculable (Redwater, canine and equine piroplasmosis) and the uninoculable (East Coast Fever) by injection of infected blood. The parasites in the latter are much smaller than in the former. He named the parasites of East Coast Fever Piroplasma parvum. Theiler distinguished the parasite of East Coast Fever from P. bovis because of the frequent occurrence of bacillary forms and the minute size of the parasite, but he nevertheless retained the new parasite in the genus Piroplasma.


Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 697
Author(s):  
Narges Mashkour ◽  
Karina Jones ◽  
Wytamma Wirth ◽  
Graham Burgess ◽  
Ellen Ariel

Characterised by benign tumours, fibropapillomatosis (FP) is a debilitating disease that predominantly afflicts the endangered green turtle (Chelonia mydas). A growing body of histological and molecular evidence has associated FP tumours with Chelonid alphaherpesvirus 5 (ChHV5). However, a recent study which detected both ChHV5 and Chelonia mydas papillomavirus 1 (CmPV1) DNA in FP tumour tissues has challenged this hypothesis. The present study aimed to establish a probe-based qPCR to assess the wider prevalence of CmPV1 and co-occurrence with ChHV5 in 275 marine turtles foraging in waters adjacent to the east coast of Queensland, Australia: three categories: Group A (FP tumours), Group B (non-tumoured skin from FP turtles) and Group C (non-tumoured skin from turtles without FP). Concurrent detection of ChHV5 and CmPV1 DNA is reported for all three categories, where Group A had the highest rate (43.5%). ChHV5 viral loads in Group A were significantly higher than loads seen in Group B and C. This was not the case for CmPV1 where the loads in Group B were highest, followed by Group A. However, the mean CmPV1 load for Group A samples was not significantly different to the mean load reported from Group B or C samples. Collectively, these results pivot the way we think about FP; as an infectious disease where two separate viruses may be at play.


Author(s):  
Narges Mashkour ◽  
Karina Jones ◽  
Wytamma Wirth ◽  
Graham Burgess ◽  
Ellen Ariel

Characterised by the growth of benign tumours, fibropapillomatosis (FP) is a debilitating disease that predominantly afflicts the endangered green turtle (Chelonia mydas). A growing body of histological and molecular evidence has consistently associated FP tumours with Chelonid alphaherpesvirus 5 (ChHV5), leading this virus to be considered the most likely aetiological agent of FP. However, a recent study which detected both ChHV5 and Chelonia mydas papillomavirus 1 (CmPV1) DNA in FP tumour tissues has challenged this hypothesis. The present study aimed to establish the wider prevalence of CmPV1 and co-occurrence with ChHV5 in marine turtles in waters adjacent to the east coast of Queensland, Australia. This comprehensive molecular survey screened a total of 353 samples from 275 foraging turtles using probe-based qPCR. Three sample categories were used in this study: Group A (FP tumours), Group B (non-tumoured skin from turtles with FP tumours) and Group C (non-tumoured skin from turtles without FP tumours). Concurrent detection of ChHV5 and CmPV1 DNA is reported for all three categories, with the highest rate of concurrent detection reported for Group A samples (43.5%). Collectively, these results pivot the way we think about FP; as an infectious disease where two separate viruses may be at play.


Parasitology ◽  
1916 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 244-248 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Strickland

(1) There is very little, if any, abnormal destruction of erythrocytes in cases' of infection with East Coast Fever. This is proved by blood counts, haemoglobin estimations, and the condition of the bloodforming and blood-destroying organs, all remaining practically normal. This is in marked contrast to what obtains in piroplasmosis.(2) The hypothesis advanced by Nuttall fits all the facts. According to this hypothesis the invasion of the corpuscles occurs in the internal organs where the parasites develop, and the corpuscles only act as carriers of the parasites in the blood, thereby conveying them to the tick which serves as the vector.(3) Since few, if any, of the corpuscles are destroyed they rapidly become charged with an increasing number of parasites which are being continuously produced in the internal organs as evidenced by Koch's blue bodies which form and break up in the lymphatic glands, spleen, liver, bone-marrow, etc. (Gonder, Nuttall).(4) There is a marked leucopenia in East Coast Fever, the polymorphs decreasing less rapidly than the other elements. This is in contrast with the leucocytosis observable in piroplasmosis.


Author(s):  
Taber A. Ba-Omar ◽  
Philip F. Prentis

We have recently carried out a study of spermiogenic differentiation in two geographically isolated populations of Aphanius dispar (freshwater teleost), with a view to ascertaining variation at the ultrastructural level. The sampling areas were the Jebel Al Akhdar in the north (Group A) and the Dhofar region (Group B) in the south. Specimens from each group were collected, the testes removed, fixed in Karnovsky solution, post fixed in OsO, en bloc stained with uranyl acetate and then routinely processed to Agar 100 resin, semi and ultrathin sections were prepared for study.


VASA ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 0220-0228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marion Vircoulon ◽  
Carine Boulon ◽  
Ileana Desormais ◽  
Philippe Lacroix ◽  
Victor Aboyans ◽  
...  

Background: We compared one-year amputation and survival rates in patients fulfilling 1991 European consensus critical limb ischaemia (CLI) definition to those clas, sified as CLI by TASC II but not European consensus (EC) definition. Patients and methods: Patients were selected from the COPART cohort of hospitalized patients with peripheral occlusive arterial disease suffering from lower extremity rest pain or ulcer and who completed one-year follow-up. Ankle and toe systolic pressures and transcutaneous oxygen pressure were measured. The patients were classified into two groups: those who could benefit from revascularization and those who could not (medical group). Within these groups, patients were separated into those who had CLI according to the European consensus definition (EC + TASC II: group A if revascularization, group C if medical treatment) and those who had no CLI by the European definition but who had CLI according to the TASC II definition (TASC: group B if revascularization and D if medical treatment). Results: 471 patients were included in the study (236 in the surgical group, 235 in the medical group). There was no difference according to the CLI definition for survival or cardiovascular event-free survival. However, major amputations were more frequent in group A than in group B (25 vs 12 %, p = 0.046) and in group C than in group D (38 vs 20 %, p = 0.004). Conclusions: Major amputation is twice as frequent in patients with CLI according to the historical European consensus definition than in those classified to the TASC II definition but not the EC. Caution is required when comparing results of recent series to historical controls. The TASC II definition of CLI is too wide to compare patients from clinical trials so we suggest separating these patients into two different stages: permanent (TASC II but not EC definition) and critical ischaemia (TASC II and EC definition).


VASA ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 44 (6) ◽  
pp. 451-457 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vincenzo Gasbarro ◽  
Luca Traina ◽  
Francesco Mascoli ◽  
Vincenzo Coscia ◽  
Gianluca Buffone ◽  
...  

Abstract. Background: Absorbable sutures are not generally accepted by most vascular surgeons for the fear of breakage of the suture line and the risk of aneurysmal formation, except in cases of paediatric surgery or in case of infections. Aim of this study is to provide evidence of safety and efficacy of the use of absorbable suture materials in carotid surgery. Patients and methods: In an 11 year period, 1126 patients (659 male [58.5 %], 467 female [41.5 %], median age 72) underwent carotid endarterectomy for carotid stenosis by either conventional with primary closure (cCEA) or eversion (eCEA) techniques. Patients were randomised into two groups according to the type of suture material used. In Group A, absorbable suture material (polyglycolic acid) was used and in Group B non-absorbable suture material (polypropylene) was used. Primary end-point was to compare severe restenosis and aneurysmal formation rates between the two groups of patients. For statistical analysis only cases with a minimum period of follow-up of 12 months were considered. Results: A total of 868 surgical procedures were considered for data analysis. Median follow-up was 6 years (range 1-10 years). The rate of postoperative complications was better for group A for both cCEA and eCEA procedures: 3.5 % and 2.0 % for group A, respectively, and 11.8 % and 12.9 % for group B, respectively. Conclusions: In carotid surgery, the use of absorbable suture material seems to be safe and effective and with a general lower complications rate compared to the use of non-absorbable materials.


Phlebologie ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 38 (04) ◽  
pp. 157-163 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Franek ◽  
L. Brzezinska-Wcislo ◽  
E. Blaszczak ◽  
A. Polak ◽  
J. Taradaj

SummaryA prospective randomized clinical trial was undertaken to compare a medical compression stockings with two-layer short-stretch bandaging in the management of venous leg ulcers. Study endpoints were number of completely healed wounds and the clinical parameters predicting the outcome. Patients, methods: Eighty patients with venous leg ulcers were included in this study, and ultimately allocated into two comparative groups. Group A consisted of 40 patients (25 women, 15 men). They were treated with the compression stockings (25–32 mmHg) and drug therapy. Group B consisted of 40 patients (22 women, 18 men). They were treated with the short-stretch bandages (30–40 mmHg) and drug therapy, administered identically as in group A. Results: Within two months the 15/40 (37.50%) patients in group A and 5/40 (12.50%) in group B were healed completely (p = 0.01). For patients with isolated superficial reflux, the healing rates at two months were 45.45% (10/22 healed) in group A and 18.18% (4/22 healed) in group B (p = 0.01). For patients with superficial plus deep reflux, the healing rates were 27.77% (5/18 healed) in group A and 5.55% (1/18 healed) in group B (p = 0.002). Comparison of relative change of the total surface area (61.55% in group A vs. 23.66% in group B), length (41.67% in group A vs. 27.99% in group B), width (46.16% in group A vs. 29.33% in group B), and volume (82.03% in group A vs. 40.01% in group B) demonstrated difference (p = 0.002 in all comparisons) in favour of group A. Conclusion: The medical compression stockings are extremely useful therapy in enhancement of venous leg ulcer healing (both for patients with superficial and for patients who had superficial plus deep reflux). Bandages are less effective (especially for patients with superficial plus deep reflux, where the efficiency compared to the stockings of applied compression appeared dramatically low). These findings require confirmation in other randomized clinical trials with long term results.


1989 ◽  
Vol 61 (01) ◽  
pp. 140-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshitaka Mori ◽  
Hideo Wada ◽  
Yutaka Nagano ◽  
Katsumi Deguch ◽  
Toru Kita ◽  
...  

SummaryBlood coagulation in a strain of rabbits designated as Watanabe heritable hyperlipidemic (WHHL) rabbits was examined. The activities of vitamin K-dependent clotting factors, contact factors and clotting factor VIII (F VIII) and the fibrinogen level were significantly higher in WHHL rabbits than in normolipidemic rabbits (all age groups). Values for vitamin Independent clotting factor were already higher at 2 months of age. Contact factors and fibrinogen levels increased age after 5 to 8 months. F VIII increased between 5 and 8 months and then decreased. At 2 months of age, WHHL rabbits were divided into two groups. Group A was fed standard rabbit chow and group B standard rabbit chow containing 1% probucol. Probucol prevented the progression of atherosclerosis in group B in the absence of a significant reduction in plasma cholesterol level. F VIII and fibrinogen levels were statistically decreased in all rabbits at all ages in group B (P<0.05). These differences in clotting factors between the two groups were most obvious at 8 months (P<0.02).We conclude that vitamin K-dependent clotting factors may increase with hyperlipemia and that increases in F VIII and fibrinogen may be closely related to the progression of throm- boatherosclerosis.


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