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Dive into the research topics where Claudio Petterino is active.

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Featured researches published by Claudio Petterino.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2005

Fatal necrotizing fasciitis and myositis in a captive common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) associated with Streptococcus agalactiae

V. Zappulli; Sandro Mazzariol; Laura Cavicchioli; Claudio Petterino; Luca Bargelloni; Massimo Castagnaro

A common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) was presented for necropsy after acute onset of gastrointestinal signs and cutaneous lesions that rapidly progressed to death. Gross and microscopic findings were characterized by locally extensive severe necrohemorrhagic fasciitis and cellulitis, and severe necrotizing myositis in the head and dorsocranial thorax, with numerous disseminated gram-positive cocci. Streptococcus agalactiae was isolated from the lesions and from visceral organs (liver and lung), and it was identified by standard microbiology techniques. This communication is the first report of necrotizing fasciitis in a marine mammal associated with S. agalactiae.


Veterinary Clinical Pathology | 2011

Paraneoplastic leukocytosis in a dog with a renal carcinoma

Claudio Petterino; Elisabetta Luzio; Luca Baracchini; Angelo Ferrari; Alessandra Ratto

A 7-year-old male German Shepherd dog in poor body condition had a 3-month history of intermittent hematuria. Nonregenerative anemia, mild leukocytosis, marked hypoalbuminemia, and hematuria were observed. Subsequently, marked neutrophilia and moderate monocytosis were noted; anemia, hypoalbuminemia, and hematuria persisted; and the dog developed disseminated intravascular coagulation. Ultrasonographic examination of the abdomen revealed the presence of an enlarged and irregularly shaped right kidney with a large area of cavitation, and a nephrectomy was performed 30 days after initial examination. Cytologic examination of fine-needle aspirates and imprints of the right kidney revealed a neoplastic cell population suggestive of renal carcinoma. The histopathologic diagnosis was chromophobic cystic-papillary renal carcinoma. The tumor cells expressed granulocytic/macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), detected by immunohistochemical staining, and elaboration of GM-CSF by the tumor may have mediated the leukocytosis in this dog. Following excision of the tumor, neutrophil and monocyte counts were only mildly increased. The dog died 135 days after initial presentation, and a necropsy was not permitted. Paraneoplastic neutrophilic leukocytosis is an uncommon finding and may be caused by elaboration of CSF by neoplastic cells.


BMC Veterinary Research | 2012

CXCR4 expression in feline mammary carcinoma cells: evidence of a proliferative role for the SDF-1/CXCR4 axis

Angelo Ferrari; Claudio Petterino; Alessandra Ratto; Chiara Campanella; Roberto Würth; Stefano Thellung; Guendalina Vito; Federica Barbieri; Tullio Florio

BackgroundMammary tumours frequently develop in female domestic cats being highly malignant in a large percentage of cases. Chemokines regulate many physiological and pathological processes including organogenesis, chemotaxis of inflammatory cells, as well as tumour progression and metastasization. In particular, the chemokine/receptor pair SDF-1/CXCR4 has been involved in the regulation of metastatic potential of neoplastic cells, including breast cancer. The aim of this study was the immunohistochemical defininition of the expression profile of CXCR4 in primary and metastatic feline mammary carcinomas and the evaluation of the role of SDF-1 in feline mammary tumour cell proliferation.ResultsA total of 45 mammary surgical samples, including 33 primary tumours (31 carcinomas and 2 adenomas), 6 metastases, and 4 normal mammary tissues were anlyzed. Tumor samples were collected from a total number of 26 animals, as in some cases concurrent occurrence of neoplasm in more than one mammary gland was observed. Tissues were processed for standard histological examination, and all lesions were classified according to the World Health Organization criteria. CXCR4 expression in neoplastic cells was evaluated by immunohistochemistry. The level of CXCR4 immunoreactivity was semi-quantitatively estimated as CXCR4 score evaluating both the number of positive cells and the intensity of staining. Six primary, fibroblast-free primary cultures were obtained from fresh feline mammary carcinomas and characterized by immunofluorescence for CXCR4 and malignant mammary cell marker expression. SDF-1-dependent in vitro proliferative effects were also assayed. CXCR4 expression was observed in 29 out of 31 malignant tissues with a higher CXCR4 score observed in 4 out of 6 metastatic lesions than in the respective primary tumours. In 2 benign lesions analyzed, only the single basaloid adenoma showed a mild positive immunostaining against CXCR4. Normal tissue did not show CXCR4 immunoreactivity. CXCR4 score was statistically significantly associated with the histological features of the samples, showing an increase accordingly with the degree of neoplastic transformation (from normal tissue to metastatic lesions). Finally, in the primary cultures obtained from 6 primary feline mammary carcinomas CXCR4 expression was detected in all cells and its activation by SDF-1 in vitro treatment caused a significant increase in the proliferation rate in 5 out of 6 tumours.ConclusionsThese results indicate that malignant feline mammary tumours commonly express CXCR4, with a higher level in malignant tumours, and, in most of the cases analysed, metastatic cells display stronger immunoreactivity for CXCR4 than the corresponding primary tumours. Moreover, CXCR4 activation in primary cultures of feline mammary carcinomas causes increase in the proliferative rate. Thus, SDF-1/CXCR4 system seems to play a tumorigenic in feline mammary gland malignancy and in vitro cultures from these tumour samples may represent an experimental model to investigate the biological and pharmacological role of this chemokinergic axis.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2010

An Intra-Abdominal Malignant Mesenchymoma Associated with Nonabsorbable Sutures in a Ferret (Mustela Putorius Furo)

Claudio Petterino; Marco Bedin; Marta Vascellari; Franco Mutinelli; Alessandra Ratto

A 6-year-old ferret (Mustela putorius furo) was presented with abdominal enlargement. Clinical examination revealed an intra-abdominal mass measuring approximately 5 cm in diameter. Abdominal survey radiographs revealed a sharply marginated mass with multifocal radiodense foci, suggestive of pathologic calcification. A complete blood cell count revealed a moderate, normocytic, normochromic, nonregenerative anemia. The mass was surgically removed en bloc, fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin solution, and routinely processed for histologic and immunohistochemical investigation. The neoplastic tissue consisted of a mixed neoplastic cell population, including osteosarcoma and fibrosarcoma components. Immunohistochem-istry revealed that both neoplastic cell populations were positive for vimentin and negative for actin (smooth and striated), desmin, and myoglobin. Nonabsorbable suture material was admixed with the neoplastic tissue in the histologic section. This material was birefringent when viewed microscopically under polarized light.


Comparative Haematology International | 2010

A bilateral ovarian psammomatous papillary cystic adenocarcinoma in a German Shepherd bitch

Claudio Petterino; Paola Modesto; Alessandra Ratto

A 14-year-old, 30-kg, intact female, German Shepherd was presented with a history of lethargy, anorexia, decreased body condition, dyspnoea, enlarged abdomen and abnormal oestral manifestation. The dog was then referred for further and complete clinical evaluation. On physical evaluation, the dog was depressed, dyspnoic, slightly dehydrated and the abdomen was distended with a positive succussion; an abdominal effusion was presumed. Disseminated peritoneal carcinomatosis with multi-organ metastasis and bilateral ovarian cystic papillary adenocarcinoma was diagnosed. Multiple psammoma bodies were also seen scattered throughout the examined tissue sections of ovarian tumours. Clinicians and pathologist should be alert to the occurrence of these uncommon tumour and its clinical pathological features and should be familiar with their diagnosis and management.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2009

A Case of Interscapular Fibrosarcoma in a Dwarf Rabbit (Oryctolagus Cuniculus)

Claudio Petterino; Paola Modesto; Daniela Strata; Marta Vascellari; Franco Mutinelli; Angelo Ferrari; Alessandra Ratto

A 1-year-old, intact, male dwarf rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) was vaccinated against myxomatosis and rabbit viral hemorrhagic disease in February 1999, and a localized reaction appeared in the same anatomic site within a few days. No regression was observed after subcutaneous antibiotic treatment. The rabbit was kept under observation, and the swelling apparently disappeared in 3 months. The owner then decided to avoid any further subcutaneous drug administration. The referring veterinarian examined the animal on July 2006 for the sudden appearance of a nodular, 4.5 cm × 3.5 cm × 2.0 cm, subcutaneous mass located over the interscapular space. Fine-needle aspiration was performed, and a population of neoplastic spindle cells, rare pleomorphic multinucleated cells, and rare leukocytes were observed. The mass was surgically removed, fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin, and routinely processed for histologic, histochemical, and immunohistochemical diagnostic investigation. The neoplastic tissue exhibited fascicles composed of malignant spindle-shaped cells with elongated to oval hyperchromatic nuclei and scant cytoplasm. Occasional multinucleated cells were also observed. The neoplastic cells were immunoreactive for vimentin but did not stain for smooth muscle actin, desmin, myoglobin, and cytokeratins (AE1/AE3). Moreover, the histochemical stain for aluminum was positive. The diagnosis was fibrosarcoma based on morphologic and immunohistochemical results. The histologic features of this neoplasm were remarkably similar to feline injection-site sarcoma.


Veterinary Research Communications | 2007

Immunohistochemical Study of Phospho-Stat3-ser727 Expression in Feline Mammary Gland Tumours

Claudio Petterino; G. Podestà; A. Ratto; Michele Drigo; C. Pellegrino

We describe the expression of pStat3-ser727 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 phosphorylated on serine 727) in normal, hyperplastic and neoplastic feline mammary gland tissue assessed by immunohistochemistry in 56 cats. The samples included 4 normal mammary non-lactating tissues, 13 hyperplastic lesions (9 lobular and 4 fibroepithelial) and 39 tumours (6 benign and 33 carcinomas). For immunohistochemistry, tissue sections were incubated with anti-pStat3-ser727 monoclonal antibodies and visualized with EnVision-DAB polymer. pStat3-ser727 positivity was quantified in a semi-quantitative manner, differentiating cytoplasmic and nuclear localization. Intense anti-pStat3-ser727 immunoreactivity was detected in epithelial neoplastic cells and in the fibro-component in two fibroepithelial hyperplastic lesions. The immunostaining was dot-like in the cytoplasm and homogeneous in the nuclei in both benign and malignant lesions. Statistically significant relations were observed between nuclear expression of pStat3-ser727 and the pleomorphism score (p = 0.006), mitotic activity (p < 0.0001), and histological grade (p < 0.0001). In contrast, no significant correlations were observed for cytoplasmic pStat3-ser727. These findings add new and interesting information on the potential role of the phosphorylated form of Stat3 in malignant lesions.


Veterinary Clinical Pathology | 2014

What is your diagnosis? Perianal gland mass in a cat

Claudio Petterino; Nick Woodger

An 11-year-old neutered male Domestic Shorthair cat was presented with an invasive perianal mass to the right of the anus. A slight discharge disappeared following antibiotic and anti-inflammatory therapy for approximately 2 weeks. A distinct firm mass remained and fine-needle aspiration was performed. No more clinical and laboratory results were available. Multiple slides from the fine-needle–aspirated material were received for the cytologic examination (Figure 1). A


Veterinary Research Communications | 2006

Expression of Stat3 in feline mammary gland tumours and its relation to histological grade

Claudio Petterino; A. Ratto; E. Arcicasa; G. Podestà; Michele Drigo; C. Pellegrino

The expression of Stat3 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 3) in normal and neoplastic feline mammary gland tissue was assessed by immunohistochemistry in 72 cats. The samples included 3 normal nonlactating mammary tissues, 17 hyperplastic lesions (11 lobular and 6 fibroepithelial) and 52 neoplasms (5 benign and 47 malignant). For immunohistochemistry, tissue sections were incubated with anti-Stat3 monoclonal antibody and visualized with EnVision–DAB polymer. Stat3 positivity was assessed in a semiquantitative manner. Normal mammary tissue showed occasional cytoplasmic and nuclear positivity, although the number of positive cells was lower than in the hyperplastic specimens. In neoplastic tissue, high numbers of neoplastic cells with a moderate to intense cytoplasmic and nuclear positivity were observed. Selected variations in the staining pattern correlated with malignancy. Moreover, a positive association was seen between the histological grade and the Stat3 score (p < 0.0001; correlation coefficient 0.750). A linear regression model showed a positive association between mitotic count and Stat3 expression (p < 0.001). These results further support published data found in humans regarding to the relation between the expression of Stat3 and malignancy.


Veterinary Clinical Pathology | 2014

What is your diagnosis? An intraocular mass in a dog.

Claudio Petterino; Sandy Bjornson; Simon Hayes

A 6-year-old male neutered Springer Spaniel was presented with a reddened but pain free left eye. There was a large intraocular mass measuring approximately 5 mm in diameter, deforming the pupil margin. Under slit lamp examination, the mass was pink and highly vascularized, and appeared to be attached to the dorsal iris. Intraocular pressure was 12 mmHg compared to 18 mmHg in the right eye, indicating a uveitis. The clinical differential diagnoses included iridociliary adenocarcinoma and atypical melanoma. Under general anesthesia, fine needle aspiration of the mass was performed through the limbus using a 25 Gauge needle and a 5 mL syringe. Multiple slides were made and sent for cytologic evaluation (Figure 1). On the basis of the cytology report, the eye was subsequently enucleated via a lateral approach and processed for histopathologic examination. A

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