J.R. Jaber
University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
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Featured researches published by J.R. Jaber.
Veterinary Parasitology | 2011
Jorge F. González; Álvaro Hernández; Els N.T. Meeusen; Francisco Rodríguez; J.M. Molina; J.R. Jaber; Herman W. Raadsma; David Piedrafita
Canaria Hair Breed (CHB) sheep are more resistant than Canaria sheep (CS) to experimental Haemonchus contortus infection. Protective responses appear effective against the adult stage of the parasite, not as commonly reported in other breeds against the larval stages. In this study we have quantified several abomasal immune cells and correlated these with parasitological variables for each breed. A significant negative correlation between CD4+ T cell numbers and worm burden or length at 28 dpi was seen only in CS sheep. Significant negative correlations for both abomasal eosinophils and γδ/WC1+ T cells, and fecundity of the adult worms were observed only in the resistant CHB sheep breed. Tissue eosinophils and γδ/WC1+ T cells were positively correlated in CHB sheep. We suggest that the two sheep breeds have disparate immune responses following infection with the parasite and that γδ+ T cells in association with eosinophils may play a hitherto unrecognised role in modulating fecundity in H. contortus adult female parasites.
Diseases of Aquatic Organisms | 2013
J.R. Jaber; J. Pérez; D. Rotstein; R. Zafra; P. Herráez; C. Carrascosa; A. Fernández
Biliary cirrhosis produced by Campula spp. is described in 1 striped dolphin Stenella coeruleoalba and 4 harbour porpoises Phocoena phocoena. The hepatic lesions consisted of severe proliferation of fibrous connective tissue with loss of the lobular pattern, nodular regeneration of the hepatic tissue, bile duct hyperplasia and severe inflammatory infiltrate composed of eosinophils, macrophages, lymphocytes and plasma cells. These lesions were associated with severe infestation by Campula spp. Although inflammatory and degenerative hepatic lesions are frequently found in stranded dolphins, biliary cirrhosis has not been previously reported in cetaceans. Massive infestation by these parasites should be included as a cause of hepatic failure resulting in stranding of marine mammals.
Journal of Applied Animal Research | 2013
J.R. Jaber; J. Pérez; Conrado Carrascosa; Matilde Carballo; Antonio Fernández
This paper describes the features of non-specific reactive hepatitis (NSRH) in dolphins stranded on the coast of the Canary Islands (Spain). The histological appearance of NSRH was marked by the proliferation of Kupffer cells and the presence of granulocytes, plus lymphocytes and plasma cells scattered throughout the liver parenchyma and in the portal or perivenular stroma, without or with minimal evidence of hepatocyte necrosis. NSRH was composed of inflammatory infiltration of CD3+ T-lymphocytes and IgG+ plasma cells in the portal spaces and hepatic sinusoids. The anti-S100 protein polyclonal antibody reacted with a variable number of lymphocytes from the portal areas and hepatic sinusoids and with Kupffer cells and the epithelial cells of the bile ducts.
Veterinary Journal | 2015
F. Rodríguez; José B. Poveda; J.R. Jaber; J. Orós; J. L. Rodríguez
Caprine contagious agalactia is a syndrome most frequently caused by Mycoplasma agalactiae. The pathogenic mechanisms that allow M. agalactiae to persist in the mammary gland tissues following infection, despite a prominent inflammatory response, are yet to be fully established. The aim of the present study was to investigate cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 in the mammary gland of goats during M. agalactiae infection. COX-2 expression was evaluated by immunohistochemistry in the inflammatory lesions of 10 goats affected with M. agalactiae-induced mastitis (five naturally infected and five experimentally infected). Epithelial cells, macrophages, endothelial cells, fibroblasts and, to a lesser extent, neutrophils demonstrated positive immunostaining for COX-2, associated with areas of mastitis and with the presence of M. agalactiae antigen. These research findings suggest that COX-2 is involved in the inflammatory response that occurs in caprine contagious agalactia.
BMC Veterinary Research | 2015
A. Arencibia; Mario Encinoso; J.R. Jaber; Daniel Morales; Diego Blanco; Alejandro Artiles; José M. Vázquez
BackgroundThe purpose of this study was to describe the normal appearance of the bony and soft tissue structures of the stifle joint of a Bengal tiger (Panthera tigris) by low-field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and the use of gross anatomical dissections performed as anatomical reference. A cadaver of a mature female was imaged by MRI using specific sequences as the Spin-echo (SE) T1-weighting and Gradient-echo (GE) STIR T2-weighting sequences in sagittal, dorsal and transverse planes, with a magnet of 0.2 Tesla. The bony and articular structures were identified and labelled on anatomical dissections, as well as on the magnetic resonance (MR) images.ResultsMR images showed the bone, articular cartilage, menisci and ligaments of the normal tiger stifle. SE T1-weighted sequence provided excellent resolution of the subchondral bones of the femur, tibia and patella compared with the GE STIR T2-weighted MR images. Articular cartilage and synovial fluid were visualised with high signal intensity in GE STIR T2-weighted sequence, compared with SE T1-weighted sequence where they appeared with intermediate intensity signal. Menisci and ligaments of the stifle joint were visible with low signal intensity in both sequences. The infrapatellar fat pad was hyperintense on SE T1-weighted images and showed low signal intensity on GE STIR T2-weighted images.ConclusionsMRI provided adequate information of the bony and soft tissues structures of Bengal tiger stifle joints. This information can be used as initial anatomic reference for interpretation of MR stifle images and to assist in the diagnosis of diseases of this region.
Food Control | 2015
Conrado Carrascosa; Rafael Millán; J.R. Jaber; Pablo Lupiola; Cristóbal del Rosario-Quintana; Cristina Mauricio; Esther Sanjuán
Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2013
R. Zafra; N. Soria-López; E. Díez de Castro; J.R. Jaber; E. Mozos; J. Pérez
Journal of Equine Veterinary Science | 2012
R. Zafra; Jose C. Estepa; Escolastico Aguilera-Tejero; J.R. Jaber; M.J. Bautista; I.L. Pacheco; J. Pérez
CEFood Congress 2014 | 2014
António Raposo; Conrado Carrascosa; Rafael Millán; Esther Sanjuán; J.R. Jaber; Esteban Pérez
Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2013
J.R. Jaber; J. Pérez; R. Zafra; A. Suárez-Bonnet; O. Quesada; Antonio Fernández