Corinne K. Dimmock
Animal Research Institute
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Featured researches published by Corinne K. Dimmock.
Experimental Parasitology | 1976
R.J. Dalgliesh; Corinne K. Dimmock; M.W.M. Hill; L.T. Mellors
Abstract The pathology of severe Babesia argentina infections in splenectomized calves was studied. The calves were infected by intravenous inoculation of 10 9 –10 10 B. argentina and given 0.1 mg/kg betamethasone to enhance the parasitemia. Hematological changes observed during detailed studies of the course of infection in eight calves, three of which subsequently died, included thrombocytopenia, leucopenia, and reduced fibrinogen levels. The prothrombin time and partial thromboplastin time were prolonged in all three calves tested, and pathological levels of fibrinogen degradation products were detected in both of two calves tested. Massive pulmonary edema was a constant finding at autopsy of 24 fatal cases. Histopathological examination revealed widespread fibrin thrombi in capillaries and larger vessels of lung, in capillaries of renal glomeruli, and in hepatic sinusoids. The findings established the occurrence of disseminated intravascular coagulation in the acute infections studied.
Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 1986
Corinne K. Dimmock; R. J. Rogers; Y. S. Chung; A.R. McKenzie; P.D. Waugh
Lymphoblastic leukaemia, preceded by a significantly increasing percentage of prolymphocytes in peripheral blood smears for from 12 to 68 weeks before death was a feature of sheep which developed lymphosarcoma following inoculation with the Australian strain of bovine leucosis virus (BLV). Lymphocytosis and/or the appearance of immature cells were a reliable predictor of tumour formation in sheep, but not in cattle. There was a terminal lymphoblastic leukaemia in only 43 of 84 cattle with lymphosarcoma. Differences in the morphological appearance and glycogen content of the leukaemic lymphoblasts of sheep and cattle were observed. In spite of these differences the high frequency of lymphocytosis and lymphosarcoma in experimentally infected sheep suggests that they could be a useful model for studying the pathological and immunological responses to BLV infection.
Avian Pathology | 1979
T.M. Grimes; T.J. Bagust; Corinne K. Dimmock
A wide range of clinical, pathological and haematological effects were found over a 40-week period in chickens inoculated at 1-day-old with a low-passage, cell-culture preparation of an Australian strain of reticuloendotheliosis virus. Feathering defects and statistically significant depression of body weights occurred in chickens up to 8 weeks of age. Other findings in birds that died or were culled during the 40-week experimental period included mild anaemia, leucopenia, heterophilia, hypoplasia of immune system organs, inflammation in visceral and nervous system organs, and bacterial or fungal infections. These results suggested that ill-thrift and death in some chickens infected with reticuloendotheliosis virus may be due to secondary infections with microorganisms subsequent to damage of immune system organs by that virus. Lymphoreticular-cell tumours of the liver, kidney or spleen were found in two birds aged 22 and 24 weeks. These results establish reticuloendotheliosis virus as a possible cause of tumours in adult fowls. Horizontal transmission of virus was demonstrated but the only abnormalities detected in the in-contact chickens were feathering defects.
Leukemia Research | 1988
Leigh Ladd; Richard Brandon; Janet Coulston; Lyle Daniel; Corinne K. Dimmock; Martin F. Lavin
Circulating lymphocytes and tumour cells from 12 sheep experimentally infected with bovine leukaemia virus (BLV), for periods of time varying from 9 to 48 weeks, were analysed for evidence of integrated and unintegrated provirus. Hybridization analysis demonstrated that the provirus was integrated at one or two sites in all cases. Integration was observed at different sites in the animals studied and there was no evidence of unintegrated virus molecules in infected sheep lymphocytes or tumour cells. The data obtained support a monoclonal origin of different tumours in the same sheep.
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1979
Corinne K. Dimmock; P.D. Waugh; R. J. Rogers
Adult cattle in a Queensland dairy herd with a history of deaths from lymphosarcoma were sampled regularly over a 4 year period for the identification of animals with persistent lymphocytosis (PL). Twenty-one of 94 animals that were sampled at least 6 times had PL. At the initial sampling 27% of the animals had lymphocytosis. Culling of haematologically positive animals in the first 18 months of the investigation reduced this to 5.3%, but cessation of the culling programme resulted in a gradual increase in the percentage of animals with lymphocytosis. Four deaths from lymphosarcoma occurred in adult animals, but only in the first 18 months of the investigation. Two of these animals had lymphocytosis and two lymphoblastic leukaemia. The Calf of one of the latter cows developed lymphoblastic leukaemia and lymphosarcoma by the time it was 6 months of age. Although histological evidence of lymphosarcoma was lacking in a number of clinically normal animals with lymphocytosis, haematological investigation identified a group of animals within the herd that may develop lymphosarcoma.
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1988
R. J. Rogers; Corinne K. Dimmock; Aj De Vos; Barry J. Rodwell
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1983
P. Timms; R. J. Dalgliesh; D. N. Barry; Corinne K. Dimmock; Barry J. Rodwell
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1991
Corinne K. Dimmock; Y. S. Chung; MacKenzie Ar
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1970
Corinne K. Dimmock; K. Bell
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1984
R. J. Rogers; Y. S. Chung; Corinne K. Dimmock