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Dive into the research topics where E. Gruys is active.

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Featured researches published by E. Gruys.


Veterinary Quarterly | 1994

Concentrations of serum Amyloid‐a (SAA) and haptoglobin (HP) as parameters of inflammatory diseases in cattle

S.P.M. Alsemgeest; H.C. Kalsbeek; Th. Wensing; J.P. Koeman; A.M. van Ederen; E. Gruys

The concentrations of the acute-phase proteins, serum amyloid-A (SAA) and haptoglobin (Hp), were determined in the plasma of healthy cows (n = 25) and cows with spontaneous acute (n = 6), subacute (n = 37), or chronic (n = 7) inflammatory diseases. The plasma concentration of SAA alone, Hp alone, and the Hp/SAA ratio, differed significantly (p < 0.001) between healthy animals and animals with inflammatory diseases. Plasma Hp concentrations in the group of cows with acute inflammatory diseases were significantly (p < 0.01) different from those in the group with chronic inflammatory diseases. Moreover, the Hp/SAA ratio in chronic inflammatory diseases was significantly different from this ratio in acute (p < 0.01) and subacute (p < 0.05) inflammatory diseases. It is therefore concluded that the plasma concentrations of SAA and Hp and the Hp/SAA ratio are useful parameters to distinguish healthy animals from animals with inflammation and can be helpful in distinguishing between acute and chronic of inflammatory diseases.


Veterinary Quarterly | 2005

Non esterified fatty acids (NEFA) in dairy cattle. A review

A.A. Adewuyi; E. Gruys; F.J.C.M. van Eerdenburg

Summary The objective of this report is to review the literature on elevated blood concentrations of nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA) before and after parturition in high‐yielding dairy cows. It highlights the factors that influence serum NEFA production and their circulation before and after parturition, such as adaptation for nutrient partitioning for fetal needs, onset of lactogenesis, stress of calving and numerous changes in physiological, metabolic, and endocrine status to accommodate parturition and lactogenesis. The role of NEFA in the liver and peripheral tissues and its toxic effects when in excess are discussed. The cows adaptive physiologic mechanisms to prevent or decrease excessive values of serum NEFA and preventive and therapeutic interventions to enhance these mechanisms are categorized as natural and artificial antidotes respectively. Feeding systems during the dry period and daily exercise or walking activity which may burn excessive NEFA through β‐oxidation in the muscles are considered as more useful antidotes to managing the NEFA metabolism. This will minimize accumulation of lipids in the liver during early lactation and alleviate the negative effects of plasma NEFA leading to more optimal metabolic health and productivity of dairy cows.


Amyloid | 2001

Immunohistochemical investigation of the brain of aged dogs. I. Detection of neurofibrillary tangles and of 4-hydroxynonenal protein, an oxidative damage product, in senile plaques.

Nikolaos Papaioannou; Peter C.J. Tooten; Anne Marie van Ederen; Jürgen Bohl; Jaime Rofina; Thomas Tsangaris; E. Gruys

In the aging dog brain lesions develop spontaneously. They share some morphological characteristics with those of Alzheimers disease in man. Diffuse and primitive plaques are well known, whereas neuritic plaques rarely develop. Neurofibrillary tangles have not been seen in the canine. The aim of the present investigation was to study major age-related changes of the dogs brain using paraffin sections with respect to cross-immunoreactivity oftau, Aβ protein and other immunoreactive components including hydroxynonenal protein, which is a marker for oxidative damage. The occurrence of neurofibrillary tangles and of the protein tau therein was studied in serial brain sections of two dogs with the Gallyas stain and by immunohistochem-istry with three different antibodies against tau. Senile plaques were stained with a monoclonal anti-Aβ (residues 8-17), polyclonal anti-apolipoprotein E and a monoclonal antibody against 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE). Amyloid deposits and controls were screened by Congo red staining viewed in fluorescent light, followed by polarized light for green birefringence. With the Gallyas stain and one of the antisera against tau, neurofibrillary tangles were revealed in a similar dispersed pattern, whereas the other antitau antisera gave negative results. With the anti-HNE a positive reaction was found in cerebral amyloid deposits and in vascular wall areas where amyloid deposition was confirmed by Congo-red staining, and in perivascular cells and in some neurons. These results indicate that the canine with his tangles and plaques which show oxidative changes, forms a spontaneous model for understanding the early changes and their interrelationships in Alzheimers disease.


Brain Research | 2006

Cognitive disturbances in old dogs suffering from the canine counterpart of Alzheimer's disease

Jaime Rofina; A.M. van Ederen; Mathilda J. M. Toussaint; M. Secrève; A.J.F. van der Spek; I. van der Meer; F.J.C.M. van Eerdenburg; E. Gruys

In geriatric dogs, Alzheimer-like behavior is frequently observed. This behavior has been classified by several authors using questionnaires and a correlation has been described between cognitive dysfunctions and Alzheimer-like pathology. In the present study, cognitive performance was correlated with brain pathology for 30 dogs of varying ages. Within these animals, two age-matched groups of old dogs with and without behavioral changes were compared. The behavioral changes were analyzed and scored with questionnaires and necropsy was performed to rule out any other cause for changed behavior. Measurements, (immuno)-histochemical staining and fluorescence microscopy were used to detect cortex atrophy, amyloid, rest-products of oxidative damage, demyelination and accumulations of macrophages in the brains of these dogs. Spearman rank correlation coefficients (r) were calculated and adjusted according to Bonferonni. In the whole group (young to very old dogs), the age of the animal showed a significant correlation with various behavioral changes (r = 0.7 to 0.9, P < 0.01). The dementia score correlated significantly (r = 0.6 to 0.8, P < 0.01) with all the brain lesions studied, except one, i.e. demyelination (r = -0.4, P > 0.05). These results suggest that a questionnaire can be used to diagnose Alzheimer-like changes in canine practice. Oxidative damage on a cellular and a nuclear level plays an important role in behavior changes.


Veterinary Quarterly | 2006

An overview of swine influenza.

H. Kothalawala; Mathilda J. M. Toussaint; E. Gruys

Summary Swine influenza is a highly infectious viral disease of pigs, causing considerable economic impact. The causative agent is known as a type A orthomyxovirus with a segmented RNA genome. Influenza type A virus is a highly contagious pathogen among a limited number of birds and mammals. The objective of this review is to summarize the current knowledge in swine influenza infection in pigs with emphasizing on epidemiology, pathogenesis, diagnostic techniques and control measures.


Amyloid | 2004

Histochemical accumulation of oxidative damage products is associated with Alzheimer-like pathology in the canine

Jaime Rofina; Kuldeep Singh; Alice Skoumalova-Vesela; Anne Marie van Ederen; Alfonsus J. A. M. van Asten; J. Wilhelm; E. Gruys

An important lesion in Alzheimers disease (AD) patient brains is the neurofibrillary tangle (NFT). Hyperphosphorylated tau is its major component. In a former paper we described some NFT in the canine brain. During aging, moreover, advanced glycation end products (AGE) might accumulate. Glycated tau induces lipid peroxidation in vivo and tau and AGE antigens have been mentioned to co-localize in NFT. This indicates that AGE may play an important role in Alzheimer disease (AD) by oxidation of tau. The aim of the present study was to investigate amyloid, neurofibrillary tangles, Abeta precursor protein, Abeta, tau, ubiquitin, advanced glycation end products, 4-hyroxynonenal protein and lipofuscin in a series of dogs of varying ages. The results showed a significant positive correlation between age and amyloid quantity (Congo red staining), HNE staining and lipofuscin (LF), and between amyloid quantity and HNE staining and LF. Staining for AβPP seemed to have a tendency to increase with age, whereas staining for tau, ubiquitin and AGE each only gave limited positive results in a proportion of the older dogs. Preliminary studies including loss of cognitive capabilities in the older dogs and chemical measurement of lipofuscin-like pigment (LFP) accumulation in brain extracts revealed an increase with old age and dementia. The Congo red, HNE and LF results suggest that deposition of amyloid with aging might be associated with formation of end products of lipid peroxidation. The finding of the limited positive signals for tau, ubiquitin and AGE in some old cases might indicate that the spontaneous brain pathology of the aged dog reveals similarities to early stages observed in AD in humans especially those with Down syndrome.


Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 1996

Primary bovine hepatocytes in the study of cytokine induced acute-phase protein secretion in vitro

S.P.M. Alsemgeest; G.A.E. van 't Klooster; A. S. J. P. A. M. Van Miert; C.K. Hulskamp-Koch; E. Gruys

To investigate the utility of primary cultures of bovine hepatocytes for compartmentalized acute phase protein studies the secretion of serum amyloid-A (SAA) and haptoglobin (Hp) was measured after stimulation by pro-inflammatory cytokines (recombinant human IL-6 (rhIL-6) and recombinant human tumour necrosis factor-alpha (rhTNF-alpha)). During the incubation period of the experiment, the SAA and Hp secretion into the culture medium increased (P < 0.05). SAA concentrations showed an additional increase following treatment with each of the cytokines (P < 0.01). Hp concentrations remained unchanged, whereas incubation with a combination of both resulted in a significant increase of the medium concentration of both SAA (P < 0.01) and Hp (P < 0.05). From these findings it is concluded that primary bovine hepatocytes can be used for in vitro studies on acute-phase protein secretion.


Veterinary Quarterly | 2003

Canine transmissible venereal tumour: cytogenetic origin, immunophenotype, and immunobiology. A review.

S. Mukaratirwa; E. Gruys

Summary Canine transmissible venereal tumour (CTVT) is the only known naturally occurring tumour that can be transplanted as an allograft across major histocompatibility (MHC) barriers within the same species, and even to other members of the canine family, such as foxes, coyotes and wolves. The progression of this tumour is unique in that, it follows a predictable growth pattern. In natural and experimental cases, the growth pattern includes progressive growth phase, static phase and regression phase, and this is followed by transplantation immunity in immunocompetent adults, while metastasis occurs in puppies and immunosuppressed dogs. Because of the uniqueness of CTVT transmission and progression, experimental investigations of various aspects of the biology of CTVT have been used to provide clues to the immunobiology of both animal and human tumours. This review examines the current state of knowledge of the aspects of the cytogenetic origin, immunopheynotype, immunobiology and immunotherapy of CTVT.


Veterinary Research | 2011

Optimal combinations of acute phase proteins for detecting infectious disease in pigs

Peter M. H. Heegaard; Anders Stockmarr; Matilde Piñeiro; Rakel Carpintero; Fermín Lampreave; Fiona M. Campbell; P. David Eckersall; Mathilda J. M. Toussaint; E. Gruys; Nanna Skall Sørensen

The acute phase protein (APP) response is an early systemic sign of disease, detected as substantial changes in APP serum concentrations and most disease states involving inflammatory reactions give rise to APP responses. To obtain a detailed picture of the general utility of porcine APPs to detect any disease with an inflammatory component seven porcine APPs were analysed in serum sampled at regular intervals in six different experimental challenge groups of pigs, including three bacterial (Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, Streptococcus suis, Mycoplasma hyosynoviae), one parasitic (Toxoplasma gondii) and one viral (porcine respiratory and reproductive syndrome virus) infection and one aseptic inflammation. Immunochemical analyses of seven APPs, four positive (C-reactive protein (CRP), haptoglobin (Hp), pig major acute phase protein (pigMAP) and serum amyloid A (SAA)) and three negative (albumin, transthyretin, and apolipoprotein A1 (apoA1)) were performed in the more than 400 serum samples constituting the serum panel. This was followed by advanced statistical treatment of the data using a multi-step procedure which included defining cut-off values and calculating detection probabilities for single APPs and for APP combinations. Combinations of APPs allowed the detection of disease more sensitively than any individual APP and the best three-protein combinations were CRP, apoA1, pigMAP and CRP, apoA1, Hp, respectively, closely followed by the two-protein combinations CRP, pigMAP and apoA1, pigMAP, respectively. For the practical use of such combinations, methodology is described for establishing individual APP threshold values, above which, for any APP in the combination, ongoing infection/inflammation is indicated.


Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery | 2001

Feline Nasal and Paranasal Sinus Tumours: Clinicopathological Study, Histomorphological Description and Diagnostic Immunohistochemistry of 123 Cases

S Mukaratirwa; J. S. van der Linde-Sipman; E. Gruys

Histological examination was performed in 123 cats with primary nasal and paranasal sinus tumours; 117 had undergone surgical biopsy and six necropsy. Special stains and immunohistochemistry were performed on poorly differentiated cases. Ninety-two percent (113/123) of the tumours were malignant. There was an increased risk for old cats (mean age of 10.9 years), and a male predilection (59% males). Clinical signs and breeds varied with the histological type of tumour. Thirty-nine percent (48/123) of the cases presented with nasal discharge, 21% (26/123) with dyspnea, 20% (24/123) with facial swelling, and 15% (19/123) with epistaxis. Forty-three percent (53/123) of the tumours were of epithelial origin. Adenocarcinomas (18/53) and squamous cell carcinomas (17/53) were the most common epithelial tumours. Fifty percent (26/53) of the epithelial tumours originated from the pseudo-stratified respiratory epithelium of the nasal cavity, 28% (15/53) from the stratified squamous epithelium of the vestibule, 9% (5/53) from olfactory epithelium, 9% (5/53) from submucosal glands and 4% (2/53) from minor salivary glands. Malignant lymphoma (35/123) was the most common tumour. Seventy-one percent (25/35) of the malignant lymphomas were B-cell tumours and 29% (10/35) were T-cell tumours. Six cases of malignant lymphomas were proved to be epitheliotropic T-cell lymphomas. This is the first report of a primary nasal epitheliotropic T-cell lymphoma in cats.

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Theodoor Niewold

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Theodoor Niewold

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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