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Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2013

Surto de laringotraqueíte infecciosa em granjas de galinhas poedeiras de múltiplas idades em Minas Gerais, Brasil

Ingred Sales Preis; Juliana Fortes Vilarinho Braga; Rodrigo M. Couto; Bruno S.A.F. Brasil; Nelson Rodrigo da Silva Martins; Roselene Ecco

A recent (November 2010) outbreak of infectious laryngotracheitis (ILT) in a multi-age laying hen facility in Minas Gerais state, Brazil, is described. Previous ILT outbreak in laying hens was only notified in Sao Paulo state, Brazil, in 2002. In the outbreak described here, the affected population was approximately eight million hens, with flock sizes ranging from 100,000 to 2,900,000 chickens. The average mortality ranged from 1 to 6%, and morbidity was around 90% (most of the twenty seven farms of the area were positive for ILT virus). Three multi-age laying farms from one company were selected for this report. Clinical signs included prostration, dyspnea, conjunctivitis, occasional swelling of the paranasal sinuses and bloody mucous nasal discharge. Severely affected chickens presented with dyspnea, gasping and became cyanotic before death. At necropsy, these chickens had fibrinous exudate blocking the larynx and the lumen of cranial part of the trachea. In addition, conjunctivitis with intense hyperemia, edema and sinuses with caseous exudate were present. On histopathology, there were marked necrosis and desquamation of respiratory ephitelium and conjunctiva with numerous syncytial cells formation and fibrinous exudate. Moderate to marked non suppurative (especially lymphocytes and plasma cells) infiltration in the lamina propria also was observed. Sixteen out of 20 examined chickens, eosinophilic intranuclear inclusion bodies were observed in the syncytial cells. The DNA extracted from larynx and trachea produced positive PCR results for ILT virus (ILTV) DNA using formalin-fixed, paraffin embedded (FFPE) samples. Amplicons from a small region of ICP4 gene were submitted to sequencing and showed 100% identity with ILTV EU104910.1 (USA strain), 99% with ILTV JN596963.1 (Australian strain) and 91% with ILTV JN580316.1 (Gallid herpesvirus 1 CEO vaccine strain) and JN580315.1 (Gallid herpesvirus 1 TCO vaccine strain).


Avian Diseases | 2012

Fatal Toxoplasmosis in a Vinaceous Amazon Parrot (Amazona vinacea)

Francisco Carlos Ferreira Junior; Rogério Venâncio Donatti; Marcus Vinícius Romero Marques; Roselene Ecco; Ingred Sales Preis; H. L. Shivaprasad; Daniel Ambrózio da Rocha Vilela; Nelson Rodrigo da Silva Martins

SUMMARY. Toxoplasmosis was diagnosed in a vinaceous Amazon parrot based on histopathology and immunohistochemistry. The bird was prostrate on the bottom of the cage and died. Necropsy revealed edema and congestion of the lungs, cloudy air sacs, and mild hepatomegaly. Histopathology revealed severe pulmonary congestion and edema and interstitial mononuclear cell inflammation associated with many cysts containing bradyzoites of Toxoplasma gondii scattered throughout. The heart had mild multifocal lymphocytic myocarditis and free tachyzoites in the muscle fibers, and the kidneys had mild interstitial nephritis and a few cysts containing bradyzoites of T. gondii. Immunohistochemistry was negative for Sarcocystis falcatula and Neospora caninum and confirmed the protozoa as T. gondii. This is the first description of T. gondii in an endangered species of a Brazilian psittacine.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2011

Identification and isolation of psittacid herpesvirus from psittacids in Brazil.

Marcela Miranda Luppi; Ana Paula Moreira Franco Luiz; Fabiana Magalhães Coelho; Marcelo de Campos Cordeiro Malta; Ingred Sales Preis; Roselene Ecco; Flávio Guimarães da Fonseca; M. Resende

Psittacid herpesvirus (PsHV) was isolated from 41 birds kept in captivity in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais/Brazil using chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEF) cell cultures. For this study, leukocytes or cloacal swabs of live birds were used. Also, portions of liver, spleen or kidney from birds collected at necropsy were utilized for these tests. PCR tests confirmed the presence of PsHV in 100% of samples. Thirty-three of the PCR products were sequenced and the results disclosed a 99% and 100% identity when compared with other sequences PsHV-1 (AY372243.1 and AF261756.1), previously deposited in GenBank. In addition, histopathology was performed and 19 of the 29 birds contained random multifocal lymphoplasmacytic hepatitis with necrotic foci, suggestive of viral infection. Three samples were examined by electron microscopy to visualize the viral particles obtained from cell culture. The viral structures measured 269 nm in average, had envelopes with an icosahedral capsid and tegument, consistent with herpesvirus. Thus, a total of 41 isolates were obtained from PsHV cell cultivation in CEF, confirming the circulation of the virus between parrots kept in captivity in Belo Horizonte, and affirming the importance of further studies in this area.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2015

Infecção transplacentária e intrauterina por Brucella abortus em búfalos (Bubalus bubalis)

Melina Garcia Saraiva de Sousa; Felipe Masiero Salvarani; Henrique dos Anjos Bomjardim; Antônio Augusto Fonseca; Ingred Sales Preis; Marilene de Farias Brito; R. C. Leite; José Diomedes Barbosa

The objective of this study was to detect Brucella abortus and injuries caused by the bacteria in fetal membranes and fetuses. Twenty buffaloes serologically positive for brucellosis were used and subjected to stamping for collection of material from the closed uterus of several months gestation. Fetal age was determined by ultrasound examination and the size of fetuses was measured at necropsy. The samples were subjected to histopathology and qPCR. From the second month of pregnancy on it was possible to detect the presence of B. abortus DNA in amniotic fluid, allantoic liquid and uterus, and from the fifth month on in placenta, heart, spleen, kidney, lung, intestine, liver and lymph nodes of the fetuses. The main pathological findings were fibrinous suppurative necrotic placentitis, and chronic endometritis.


Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine | 2011

Fatal Coccidiosis by Isospora icterus (Upton & Whitaker, 2000) in Captive Campo Troupial (Icterus jamacaii) in Brazil

Marcus Vinícius Romero Marques; Daniel Ambrózio da Rocha Vilela; Emily A. G. Andrade; Carolina Z. Galvão; J. S Resende; Francisco Carlos Ferreira Junior; Danielle de Assis Andery; Roselene Ecco; Ingred Sales Preis; Nelson Rodrigo da Silva Martins

Abstract: An outbreak of coccidiosis by Isospora icterus (I. icterus, Upton & Whitaker, 2000) in captive Campo Troupial (Icterus jamacaii) (Gmelin, 1788) at the Wild Animals Triage Center (IBAMA, Belo Horizonte, Brazil) is described. Clinical history and the necropsy findings documented diarrhea with diffuse necrotic enteritis. Sporulated oocysts (n = 100) had a bilayered wall, were subspherical, and measured 30.1 (27.5–32.5) μm in length and 28.5 (26.2–30.0) μm in width. A polar body but no micropyle was present and the length/width ratio was 1.1 (1.00–1.2). Each oocyst contained two ellipsoidal sporocysts measuring 17.6 (15.0–20.0) μm in length and 12.9 (12.5–15.0) μm in width, with a length/width ratio of 1.4 (1.2–1.5), and with Stieda and sub-Stieda bodies. Each sporocyst contained four sporozoites with granular sporocyst residuum. Oocysts were compatible with those from I. icterus, previously described in Campo Troupial.


BMC Proceedings | 2013

Use of immunohistochemistry in the differential diagnosis of cutaneous round cell tumours in dogs

Marina Rios de Araújo; Ingred Sales Preis; Gleidice E Lavale; Geovanni Dantas Cassali; Roselene Ecco

Materials and methods This work describes an antibody panel (CD117, CD3, CD79a, CD45, cytokeratin, vimentin and E-cadherin) for immunohistochemistry analyses of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections of canine cutaneous round cell tumours. Neoplastic tumours were diagnosed by histology and histochemical staining and included 89 mast cell tumours, 31 cutaneous histiocytomas, 21 cutaneous lymphomas, three plasma cell tumours, and seven unclassified round cell tumours.


Veterinary Parasitology | 2012

Molecular confirmation of Trichomonas gallinae and other parabasalids from Brazil using the 5.8S and ITS-1 rRNA regions

Roselene Ecco; Ingred Sales Preis; Daniel Ambrózio da Rocha Vilela; Marcela Miranda Luppi; Marcelo de Campos Cordeiro Malta; Robert B. Beckstead; Raphaela Stimmelmayer; Richard W. Gerhold


Brazilian Journal of Veterinary Pathology | 2009

An outbreak of chlamydiosis in captive psittacines.

Roselene Ecco; Ingred Sales Preis; Nelson Rodrigo da Silva Martins; Daniel Ambrózio da Rocha Vilela; Hulimangala L. Shivaprasad


Brazilian Journal of Veterinary Pathology | 2012

Enteritis associated with Clostridium difficile and opportunistic candidiasis in a foal

Ingred Sales Preis; Rodrigo Otávio Silveira Silva; Prhiscylla Sadanã Pires; Francisco Carlos Faria Lobato; Maristela Silveira Palhares; Renata de Pino Albuquerque Maranhão; Roselene Ecco


Archives of Virology | 2015

Molecular characterization of infectious laryngotracheitis virus in naturally infected egg layer chickens in a multi-age flock in Brazil.

Rodrigo M. Couto; Ingred Sales Preis; Juliana Fortes Vilarinho Braga; Bruno S.A.F. Brasil; Marcela G. Drummond; Nelson Rodrigo da Silva Martins; Roselene Ecco

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Roselene Ecco

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Daniel Ambrózio da Rocha Vilela

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Nelson Rodrigo da Silva Martins

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Marcela Miranda Luppi

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Rodrigo M. Couto

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Ana Paula Moreira Franco Luiz

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Bruno S.A.F. Brasil

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Fabiana Magalhães Coelho

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Flávio Guimarães da Fonseca

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Francisco Carlos Ferreira Junior

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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