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Dive into the research topics where Francisco A. Uzal is active.

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Featured researches published by Francisco A. Uzal.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

Clostridium perfringens. Enterotoxin Damages the Human Intestine In Vitro

M. E. Fernández Miyakawa; V. Pistone Creydt; Francisco A. Uzal; Bruce A. McClane; Cristina Ibarra

ABSTRACT In vitro, Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin (CPE) binds to human ileal epithelium and induces morphological damage concurrently with reduced short-circuit current, transepithelial resistance, and net water absorption. CPE also binds to the human colon in vitro but causes only slight morphological and transport changes that are not statistically significant.


Veterinary Research Communications | 2003

The early effects of Clostridium perfringens type D epsilon toxin in ligated intestinal loops of goats and sheep.

M.E. Fernández Miyakawa; Francisco A. Uzal

Clostridium perfringens type D produces enterotoxaemia in goats, sheep and other animals. The disease is caused by C. perfringens epsilon toxin and, while enterotoxaemia in goats is usually characterized by enterocolitis, the disease in sheep is characterized by systemic lesions (such as lung and brain oedema) with minor and inconsistent changes observed in the intestine. A possible explanation for these differences is that epsilon toxin is more promptly absorbed by the ovine than by the caprine intestine. In an attempt to clarify this, we examined the early effects of epsilon toxin on caprine and ovine intestine. Intestinal loop assays were performed to analyse the physiological and morphological changes induced by epsilon toxin in the intestine of these species. Fluid accumulation was observed in caprine and ovine ileum and colon treated with epsilon toxin. Ileal loops from goats treated with epsilon toxin retained sodium and water earlier than ovine ileal loops treated with the same toxin. Histological analysis showed morphological alterations in the colon of both species as early as 2 h after the commencement of epsilon toxin treatment; these changes were more marked in goats than in sheep. No morphological changes were observed in the ileum of either species after 4 h incubation with epsilon toxin. These results suggest that epsilon toxin modifies ion and water transport in the small and the large intestine of goats and sheep through different mechanisms.


Veterinary Record | 2003

Outbreak of clostridial myocarditis in calves

Francisco A. Uzal; M. Paramidani; Ronnie Antunes de Assis; W. Morris; M. F. Miyakawa

This paper describes the epidemiological and pathological features of an outbreak of clostridial myocarditis in calves due to Clostridium chauvoei. Four of seven two-month-old Hereford calves died in the course of a week. Their gross postmortem lesions were similar and consisted of irregular dark red areas of myocardial necrosis through the full thickness of the atrial and ventricular myocardium. No lesions were observed in skeletal muscle. The heart muscle had extensive multifocal areas of acute coagulative necrosis. The diagnosis was confirmed by a fluorescent antibody technique on tissue smears, by a streptavidin-biotin technique on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues, and by a PCR technique specific for the 16S rRNA of C chauvoei.


Anaerobe | 2003

In vitro effects of Clostridium perfringens type D epsilon toxin on water and ion transport in ovine and caprine intestine

M.E. Fernández Miyakawa; Cristina Ibarra; Francisco A. Uzal

Clostridium perfringens type D produces enterotoxaemia in sheep, goats and other animals. The disease is caused by C. perfringens epsilon toxin, and while enterotoxaemia in goats is usually characterized by enterocolitis, the disease in sheep is characterized by systemic lesions (such as lung and brain oedema) with minor and inconsistent changes observed in the intestine. A possible explanation for these differences is that epsilon toxin is more promptly absorbed by sheep than goat intestine. In an attempt to clarify this, we examined the in vitro effects of epsilon toxin on sheep and goat intestine. Pieces of intestinal mucosa from recently slaughtered animals were mounted in a modified Ussing-type chamber where net water flux (J(w)), short-circuit current (I(sc)) and tissue conductance (G(t)) were simultaneously recorded. After 70 min of incubation with epsilon toxin a reduction in absorptive J(w) and an increase in I(sc) and G(t) were observed in colonic tissues of both sheep and goats, but no alterations were registered in the ileum of either species. These in vitro results show that epsilon toxin affects the transport function of the colonic mucosa but it does not seem to produce any transport alteration in the ileum mucosa.


Veterinary Record | 2008

Cluster of cases of malignant schwannoma in cattle

Pablo R. Murcia; G. Delhon; Marcelo J. González; M. Vilas; José A. Ramos-Vara; M. De las Heras; R. W. Nordhausen; Francisco A. Uzal

Between 1998 and 2001, several cases of ataxia and paresis followed by recumbency and death were reported in cows from different farms in a restricted area of the Argentinian Patagonia. Five cases of this cluster were studied and a diagnosis of malignant schwannoma was established. Electron microscopy (em) of tumour samples from three of the animals revealed intracytoplasmic or interstitial structures resembling retroviral particles. Attempts to isolate a viral agent from the tumours were unsuccessful but the epidemiological data and the em findings suggest a viral aetiology.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2007

Fibrinonecrotic enteritis of piglets in a commercial farm: a postmortem study of the prevalence and the role of lesion associated agents Isospora suis and Clostridium perfringens

Macarena G. Sanz; L. Venturini; Ronnie Antunes de Assis; Francisco A. Uzal; Miguel Atilio Risso; Julio Roberto Idiart; Carlos J. Perfumo

The objectives were to determine the prevalence of fibrinonecrotic enteritis (FNE) on a farrow-to-finish farm of 1,000 sows, to categorize the pathological changes, and to to investigate the lesion associated agents Isospora suis and Clostridium perfringens. Causes of preweaning mortality (PWM) were classified into 8 categories including FNE. Obtained data were evaluated for statistical significance by adjusted Chi-square analysis. Samples of FNE were taken for complementary studies including a PCR technique for genotyping toxin genes of Clostridium perfringens from gut samples fixed in 10% neutral formalin. From 3,153 piglets examined, less than 1% was classified as FNE. FNE prevalence increased progressively from the first to the third week, the last differing statistically from the others. Eighty percent of gut samples with FNE lesions were positive to Isospora suis, when examined by PCR from 9 severe FNE lesions detected 7 positive samples only for a toxin gene, characteristic of C. perfringens type-A.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2006

Immunoprophylactic strategies against enterotoxemia caused by Clostridium perfringens type D in goats

Josir Laine A. Veschi; Iveraldo S. Dutra; Mariano E. Fernandez Miyakawa; Silvia Helena Venturolli Perri; Francisco A. Uzal

The serological response to an experimental vaccine against Clostridium perfringens type D enterotoxemia was evaluated in four groups of goats. Group 1 received colostrum from unvaccinated cows and no vaccine. Groups 2, 3 and 4 received colostrum from vaccinated cows. In addition, Groups 3 and 4 received a vaccine dose at 80 days of age, and Group 4 received a second vaccine dose at 120 days of age. Serum antibody levels were determined by ELISA in cows before and after calving, and in goats at 3, 80, 120 and 160 days of age. No significant difference in serum antibody levels was observed between vaccinated and unvaccinated cows, or between the four groups of goats evaluated at 3 days of life. Groups 3 and 4 presented mean antibody titers of 0.6 and 1.1 IU/ml, respectively, 40 days after first vaccination. The vaccine response of Group 4 was 1.8 IU/ml 40 days after the booster dose and was higher than that observed for Group 3 (0.2 IU/ml). Thus, in the proposed regimen the use of heterologous colostrum did not induce passive immunization in goat kids. However, first vaccination and a booster dose after 40 days triggered satisfactory antibody levels.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2010

Focal symmetrical encephalomalacia in sheep

Luciano A. Pimentel; Diego M. Oliveira; G. J. N. Galiza; A. F. M. Dantas; Francisco A. Uzal; Franklin Riet-Correa

Focal symmetrical encephalomalacia (FSE) is the most prominent lesion seen in the chronic form of enterotoxemia by Clostridium perfringens type D. This paper reports FSE in sheep in Brazil. Six deaths occurred within a seven days period in a flock of 70, four to 30-month-old Santa Ines sheep in the state of Paraiba in the Brazilian semiarid. The flock was grazing a paddock of irrigated sprouting Cynodon dactylon (Tifton grass), and supplemented, ad libitum, with a concentrate of soybean, corn and wheat. Nervous signs included blindness and recumbence. A 19 month-old sheep was examined clinically and necropsied after a clinical course of three days. Gross lesions were herniation of the cerebellar vermis and multifocal, bilateral, symmetric brownish areas in the internal capsule, thalamus and cerebellar peduncles. Histologic lesions were multifocal, bilateral malacia with some neutrophils, swelling of blood vessels endothelium, perivascular edema, and hemorrhages. The flock was vaccinated, before the outbreak, with only one dose of Clostridium perfringens type D vaccine. Two factors are suggested to be important for the occurrence of the disease: insufficient immunity due to the incorrect vaccination; and high nutritional levels by the supplementation with highly fermentable carbohydrates.


Veterinary Research Communications | 2004

Ovine Pulmonary Adenomatosis in Patagonia, Argentina

Francisco A. Uzal; Gustavo Delhon; Pablo R. Murcia; M. De las Heras; L. Luján; M.E. Fernández Miyakawa; Winston E. Morris; Marcelo J. González

An outbreak of pulmonary adenomatosis (OPA) occurred in sheep in Patagonia, Argentinas southernmost region. On the affected farm, nine animals died over a 6-month period with pulmonary lesions of OPA. In all cases, the histology of the lungs was characterized by proliferation of cuboideal and prismatic cells lining the alveoli. Inflammatory exudates and accumulation of alveolar macrophages were marked in most cases, but in six of the cases there was no excess fluid in the airways. The presence of the Jaagsiekte retrovirus was demonstrated in the lungs by immunocytochemistry and PCR. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of OPA in Patagonia.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2015

Systemic acanthamoebiasis associated with canine distemper in dogs in the semiarid region of Paraíba, Brazil

Maria Talita Soares Frade; Luiza F. de Melo; Clarice R.M. Pessoa; Jeann Leal de Araújo; Rafael A. Fighera; Almir Pereira de Souza; Francisco A. Uzal; A. F. M. Dantas

Infections by free-living amoebae can cause systemic disease in animals and humans. We describe the epidemiological, clinical and pathological aspects of disseminated acanthamoebiasis associated with canine distemper in three dogs of the semiarid region of Paraiba, Northeastern Brazil. Affected dogs developed progressive neurological and respiratory signs that progressed to death within in two to 20 days. Gross lesions were irregular and with yellow-reddish nodules randomly distributed in the lungs, heart, kidneys, spleen, lymph nodes, adrenals, and intestine. One dog had foci of malacia in the parietal cortex and another one in nucleus of brain basis. Histologically, pyogranulomas with areas of necrosis and hemorrhage in all organs affected were observed, associated with myriads of intralesional amoebic trophozoites. All three cases were concomitant canine distemper, that possibly triggered immunosuppression in the dogs. The diagnosis was performed through microscopic findings of infection by free-living amoebae and confirmed Acanthamoeba sp. by immunohistochemistry

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Cristina Ibarra

University of Buenos Aires

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A. F. M. Dantas

Federal University of Campina Grande

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Ronnie Antunes de Assis

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Bruce A. McClane

Australian Research Council

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G. Delhon

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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