Fábio de Souza Mendonça
Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco
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Featured researches published by Fábio de Souza Mendonça.
Acta Cirurgica Brasileira | 2013
Lígia Reis de Moura Estevão; Fábio de Souza Mendonça; Liriane Baratella-Evêncio; Ricardo Santos Simões; Maria Edna Gomes de Barros; Rosa Maria Esteves Arantes; Milene Alvarenga Rachid; Joaquim Evêncio-Neto
PURPOSE To evaluate the effects of aroeira (Schinus terebinthifolius) ointment on skin wound healing in rats. METHODS Adult male rats (n=20) were divided into four groups of five animals each, as follows: G4, G7, G14 and G21, which corresponds to 4th, 7th, 14th and 21th days postoperatively. Each animal were made two incisions on the skin, including the subcutaneous tissue, in the right and left sides of thoracic region, separated by a distance of two inches. The right lesion was treated with base ointment (vaseline, lanolin); the left one was treated with base ointment containing 5% of aroeira oil. At the end of each experimental period the lesions were evaluated for the contraction degree. Then held the collection of fragments that were fixed in 10% formalin and processed for paraffin embedding. In the histological sections (5μm) was evaluated the morphology and quantified the collagen and blood vessels. The data obtained were submitted to ANOVA test complemented by Tukey-Kramer test (p<0.05). RESULTS The contraction of the lesions was higher in wounds treated with aroeira oil than in controls at 7th and 14th days (p<0.01), whereas in the 21st day all lesions were already completely healed. The morphology showed granulation tissue more developed, with fibroblasts more bulky and collagen fibers more arranged in the experimental group at 4th, 7th and 14th days. The morphometry showed a significant increase in the quantification of collagen fibers in the experimental group at 7th and 14th days (p<0.05). CONCLUSION The aroeira oil accelerates the healing process of wounds as a macroscopic, morphological and morphometrical analysis.
Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2013
D.G. Ubiali; Raquel A.S. Cruz; D.A.J. De Paula; Maria Cristina da Silva; Fábio de Souza Mendonça; Valéria Dutra; Luciano Nakazato; Edson Moleta Colodel; Caroline Argenta Pescador
Conidiobolomycosis and pythiosis are important diseases of sheep in midwestern Brazil. Veterinary practitioners consider it difficult to differentiate between these diseases because they have similar clinical features. In this study, 186 sheep were subjected to necropsy examination over a 6-year period. Thirty (16.1%) cases of rhinitis in sheep that were caused by Conidiobolus lamprauges (n = 15) or Pythium insidiosum (n = 15) were investigated further. The lesions of C. lamprauges infection were mainly rhinopharyngeal (86.7%), localized to the ethmoidal region and associated with exophthalmos. The lesions appear as a white to yellow, firm mass that microscopically appears as a granulomatous inflammatory reaction with numerous giant cells. In contrast, P. insidiosum infection is associated with rhinofacial (93.3%) lesions that mainly involve the frontal region and hard palate and appear as an irregular, friable, yellow to red mass. Microscopically, pythiosis presents as diffuse necrotizing eosinophilic rhinitis. Immunohistochemistry using polyclonal antisera raised specifically against the two organisms was used to confirm the identity of the infectious agent in each disease. This study reports the first immunohistochemical diagnosis of conidiobolomycosis and the first description of a rhinopharyngeal lesion caused by P. insidiosum in sheep.
Acta Cirurgica Brasileira | 2012
Wagner Soares Pessoa; Lígia Reis de Moura Estevão; Ricardo Santos Simões; Maria Edna Gomes de Barros; Fábio de Souza Mendonça; Liriane Baratella-Evêncio; Joaquim Evêncio-Neto
PURPOSE To study the effects of the angico extract (Anadenanthera colubrina var. cebil) on the healing of rat skin. METHODS Twenty adult rats were divided into four groups of five animals each, the G4, G7, G14 and G21, which corresponds to the respective postoperative days. Each group received two incisions on skin and subcutaneous tissue in the right and left antimere of the thoracic region, separated by a distance of 2 cm. The right lesion was treated daily with saline and the left with the angico alcoholic extract (5%). At the end of each experimental period, animals were euthanized and fragments of the wound area, together with the edges were removed, fixed in 10% formaldehyde solution and processed for paraffin embedding. In the histological sections with 5 µm of thickness, were carried out immunohistochemical methods for detection of blood vessels (VEGF) and stained with hematoxylin and eosin for morphological analysis. Statistical analysis was done by ANOVA and Tukey test (p<0.05). RESULTS Morphological analysis showed larger fibroblasts and a higher concentration of collagen fibers in days 7 and 14 in wounds treated with the angico extract. Morphometric analysis demonstrated a significant increase in the number of blood vessels in both the seventh and 14th days (p<0.01) in wounds treated with the angico extract. CONCLUSION The angico alcoholic extract (Anadenanthera colubrina var. cebil) induces the acceleration of wound healing in skin wounds of rats.
Veterinary Surgery | 2012
Renata Gebara Sampaio Dória; Silvio Henrique de Freitas; Renata Lehn Linardi; Fábio de Souza Mendonça; Laura Peixoto de Arruda; Fabiana M. Boabaid; Carlos Augusto Araújo Valadão
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effects of intravenous regional limb perfusion (IRLP) administration of amphotericin B in horses to treat pythiosis after surgical excision and thermocautery. STUDY DESIGN Case series. ANIMALS Horses (n = 12) with Pythium insidiosum infection of the distal aspect of the thoracic or pelvic limbs. METHODS After surgical excision of granulation tissue and thermocautery, 50 mg amphotericin B was administered by IRLP through a catheter placed in a superficial vein of the affected limb next to the lesion after placing a tourniquet above the injection site. The lesions and locomotor system were evaluated before treatment and at 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, and 60 days. RESULTS Ninety-two percent of horses treated with amphotericin B had complete lesion resolution 35 or 60 days after 1 or 2 IRLP treatments, respectively. IRLP induced limb edema and pain during regional palpation in 42%, and inflammation of the injection site in 33% of horses; however these signs resolved after 14 days. CONCLUSIONS IRLP administration of amphotericin B was effective for treating pythiosis in equine limbs, resolving infection with manageable side effects.
Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2012
Fábio de Souza Mendonça; Raquel F. Albuquerque; Joaquim Evêncio-Neto; Silvio Henrique de Freitas; Renata Gebara Sampaio Dória; Fabiana M. Boabaid; David Driemeier; Dale R. Gardner; Franklin Riet-Correa; Edson Moleta Colodel
A disease of the nervous system is reported in goats in the semiarid region of northeastern Brazil. Histological examination showed diffuse vacuolation of neurons and epithelial cells of the pancreas, thyroid, renal tubules, and liver. The swainsonine-containing plant Ipomoea verbascoidea was found on both farms where the goats originated. This plant was experimentally administered to 3 goats, inducing clinical signs and histologic lesions similar to those observed in spontaneous cases. On the lectin histochemical analysis, cerebellar cells and pancreatic acinar cells gave positive reactions to Triticum vulgaris agglutinin (WGA), succinylated Triticum vulgaris agglutinin (sWGA), Lens culinaris agglutinin (LCA), Canavalia ensiformis agglutinin (ConA), Pisum sativum agglutinin (PSA), Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA120), Arachis hypogaea agglutinin (PNA), and Phaseolus vulgaris erythroagglutinin (PHA-E) suggesting storage of α-fucose, α-D-mannose, α-D-glucose, β-D-N-acetyl-glucosamine, N-acetyl-galactosamine, and acetyl-neuraminic acid. This pattern of lectin staining partially agrees with results previously reported for poisoning by swainsonine-containing plants. The chemical analysis of dried leaves of I. verbascoidea detected swainsonine (0.017%), calystegine B1 (0.16%), calystegine B2 (0.05%), and calystegine C1 (0.34%). It is concluded that I. verbascoidea causes α-mannosidosis in goats.
Research in Veterinary Science | 2012
Paulo E.C. Souza; Samuel S. Oliveira; Cristiano Rocha Aguiar-Filho; Ana Lizia Brito da Cunha; Raquel F. Albuquerque; Joaquim Evêncio-Neto; Franklin Riet-Correa; Fábio de Souza Mendonça
Three outbreaks of primary photosensitization caused by Froelichia humboldtiana are reported in the semiarid region of the states of Pernambuco and Paraíba, in northeastern Brazil. The disease occurred from March to June 2011, affecting 27 bovines out of a total of 70. The main lesions consisted of dermatitis of the white skin, with edema and necrosis. All the bovines recovered after removal from the areas invaded by F. humboldtiana. To produce the disease experimentally, one bovine with white skin was placed for 14 days into an area with F. humboldtiana as the sole forage. This bovine presented photodermatitis on the third day of consumption. The serum concentrations of total, indirect, and conjugated bilirubin and the serum activities of gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) and aspartate-aminotransferase (AST) in the spontaneously affected cattle and in the experimental cattle remained within normal ranges. It is concluded that F. humboldtiana causes primary photosensitization in cattle in northeastern Brazil.
Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2008
Fábio de Souza Mendonça; Renata Gebara Sampaio Dória; Fabio Bernardo Schein; Silvio Henrique de Freitas; Luciano Nakazato; Fabiana M. Boabaid; Daphine Ariadne Jesus de Paula; Valéria Dutra; Edson Moleta Colodel
Four outbreaks of malignant catarrhal fever (MCF) in cattle, which had contact with sheep, in Mato Grosso, Brazil, are described. In all cases, the animals had a clinical course of 4 to 7 days with no recovery. Two outbreaks occurred in the municipality of Cuiaba, the first in January 2006 with 8 cattle affected from a herd of 148, and the second in one out of 30 cattle in September 2006. The third outbreak occurred in April 2007 in the municipality of Rondonopolis, where 3 cattle died in a herd of 160. The fourth outbreak was in the municipality of Caceres in September 2007, where 2 out of 450 cattle were affected. The clinical signs were hyperthermia, intense lacrimation, nasal and oral discharge, corneal opacity, sialorrhea, oral, nasal and genital mucosal erosions, incoordination, depression and death. Necropsy findings in 4 animals were similar and consisted of lymph node swelling, and nasal, oral and esophagus erosion and ulceration. Histologically, arteritis and fibrinoid degeneration was observed in small arteries and arterioles, associated with epithelial necrosis in various organs and tissues. A nested polymerase chain reaction (nPCR) detected ovine herpes virus type 2 in frozen and paraffin embedded tissues in 3 cases.
Acta Cirurgica Brasileira | 2015
Lígia Reis de Moura Estevão; Juliana Pinto de Medeiros; Ricardo Santos Simões; Rosa Maria Esteves Arantes; Milene Alvarenga Rachid; Regildo Márcio Gonçalves da Silva; Fábio de Souza Mendonça; Joaquim Evêncio-Neto
PURPOSE To evaluate wound contraction and the concentration of mast cells in skin wounds treated with 5% BPT essential oil-based ointment in rats. METHODS Twenty rats, male, of adult age, were submitted to skin surgery on the right (RA) and left antimeres (LA) of the thoracic region. They were divided into two groups: control (RA - wounds receiving daily topical application of vaseline and lanolin) and treated (LA - wounds treated daily with the topical ointment). The skin region with wounds were collected at days 4, 7, 14 and 21 after surgery. Those were fixed in 10% formaldehyde and later processed for paraffin embedding. Sections were obtained and stained by H.E for histopathology analysis. The degree of epithelial contraction was measured and mast cell concentration were also evaluated. RESULTS The treated group showed higher mast cell concentrations (p<0.05) associated with increased contraction at day 7 and 14 respectively. CONCLUSION Ointment containing 5% Brazilian pepper tree oil increases mast cell concentration and promotes skin wound contraction in rats.
Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2013
Silvio Henrique de Freitas; Renata Gebara Sampaio Dória; Fábio de Souza Mendonça; Lázaro Manoel de Camargo; Cristiano I. Presser; Marcelo Diniz dos Santos; Antonio Carlos Shimano; Carlos Eduardo Ambrósio
The traumas that result in bone fractures, especially comminuted, have high importance in veterinary and human surgical routine. A 6mm of segmental defect was performed at the medial metaphyseal region of the left tibia of 12 rabbits and an association of fragmented heterologue mineralized bone matrix and methylmethacrylate conserved in glycerin (98%) was used as a graft to fill the bone defect. To evaluate the procedure morphological and radiological exams were performed after 30, 60, 90 and 120 days. There was gradual integration of the bone graft in the receptor bed in 100% of the cases showing that the material is biologically compatible as it promotes bone defect reparation without signs of infection, migration and/or rejection and can be considered one more option to be used as a substitute to fill bone defects.
Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2013
Cristiano Rocha Aguiar-Filho; Raquel F. Albuquerque; Brena P. Rocha; Edson Moleta Colodel; Ricardo A.A. Lemos; Franklin Riet-Correa; Joaquim Evêncio-Neto; Fábio de Souza Mendonça
To evaluate the toxicity of different concentrations of pods of Stryphnodendron fissuratum to pregnant cows, the pods of this tree were grounded, mixed in a commercial food and given to eight pregnant cows in total doses of 6.5g/kg, 7.5g/kg, 9g/kg and 10g/kg. The animals that received doses of 6.5g/kg delivered normal calves and those that received 7.5g/kg delivered weak calves that did not survive. Doses of 9g/kg resulted in the birth of an immature calf and another with congenital bilateral distichiasis, corneal opacity, and microphthalmia. Both cows that ingested 10g/kg died, and one of these aborted before death. In the dead cows, the gross and histological lesions of the digestive system and liver were similar to those previously described in S. fissuratum poisoning. No significant lesions were observed in the calves and in the aborted fetus. The phytochemical analysis of methanol extracts from pods of S. fissuratum revealed the presence of soluble tannins, proanthocyanidins, leucoanthocyanidins and the triterpenoid saponin β-amyrin. Triterpenoid saponins had been associated with the toxicity of Stryphnodendron spp. and Enterolobium spp., which cause clinical signs similar to those observed in the poisoning by S. fissuratum. The results presented herein confirmed the toxicity of S. fissuratum to bovines. However, the abortive effects of this plant was not confirmed; thus because the abortion and neonatal deaths could be due to the toxicity of the pods to the cows. New research should be done to demonstrate if S. fissuratum is a cause of malformations similar to those observed in one of the calves born from the treated cows.