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Featured researches published by Keith West.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 1999

Myocarditis and Abortion Associated with Intrauterine Infection of Sows with Porcine Circovirus 2

Keith West; Janet M. Bystrom; Chris Wojnarowicz; Neil Shantz; Mark Jacobson; Gordon Allan; Deborah M. Haines; Edward Clark; Steven Krakowka; Francis McNeilly; Carrie Konoby; Karen Martin; John Ellis

Porcine circovirus 2 (PCV2) is a recently identified agent that has been associated with post-weaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS) in swine populations. In this report, the potential spectrum of disease associated with PCV2 is expanded by evidence of vertical transmission and associated reproductive failure. PCV2 was isolated from a litter of aborted piglets from a farm experiencing late-term abortions and stillbirths. Severe, diffuse myocarditis was present in 1 piglet associated with extensive immunohistochemical staining for PCV2 antigen. Variable amounts of PCV2 antigen were also present in liver, lung, and kidney of multiple fetuses. The presence of other agents that have been associated with fetal lesions and abortion in swine, including porcine parvovirus, porcine reproductive respiratory syndrome virus, encephalomyocarditis virus, and enterovirus, could not be established.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2000

Coinfection by Porcine Circoviruses and Porcine Parvovirus in Pigs with Naturally Acquired Postweaning Multisystemic Wasting Syndrome

John Ellis; Ana C. Bratanich; Edward Clark; Gordon Allan; Brian Meehan; Deborah Haines; John Harding; Keith West; Steven Krakowka; Carrie Konoby; Lori Hassard; Karen Martin; Francis McNeilly

Postweaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS) is an emerging disease in swine. Recently, the disease has been reproduced with inocula containing a newly described porcine circovirus (PCV), designated PCV 2, and porcine parvovirus (PPV). In order to determine if these viruses interact in naturally acquired PMWS, affected tissues from field cases were examined by immunohistochemistry (IHC) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for PCV 2 and PPV, as well as by PCR for the other recognized porcine circovirus, PCV 1. Porcine circovirus 2 was detected by PCR or IHC in affected fixed or frozen tissues from 69 of 69 cases of PMWS collected over 3 years from 25 farms. Porcine parvovirus was detected in 12 of the same cases, and PCV 1 was detected in 9 of 69; however, an apparent decrease was found in the sensitivity of the PCRs used to detect the latter 2 viruses when fixed tissue from the same cases were compared with the use of frozen tissues. Porcine circovirus 2 was not detected by PCR in affected tissues from 16 age-matched pigs that had Streptococcus suis-associated disease. Electron microscopic examination of plasma pooled from 15 pigs with PMWS revealed the presence of PCV and PPV, whereas these viruses were not observed in pooled plasma from 5 age-matched clinically normal pigs. These results confirm and extend previous findings documenting a consistent association of PCV 2 with PMWS. As well, infection by PPV or PCV 1 or both may be an important cofactor in the pathogenesis of some, but apparently not all, cases of PMWS.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2008

Suggested guidelines for immunohistochemical techniques in veterinary diagnostic laboratories.

José A. Ramos-Vara; Matti Kiupel; Timothy V. Baszler; Laura Bliven; Bruce W. Brodersen; Brian J. Chelack; Keith West; Stefanie Czub; Fabio Del Piero; Sharon M. Dial; E. J. Ehrhart; Tanya Graham; Lisa Manning; Daniel Paulsen; Victor E. Valli

This document is the consensus of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians (AAVLD) Subcommittee on Standardization of Immunohistochemistry on a set of guidelines for immunohistochemistry (IHC) testing in veterinary laboratories. Immunohistochemistry is a powerful ancillary methodology frequently used in many veterinary laboratories for both diagnostic and research purposes. However, neither standardization nor validation of IHC tests has been completely achieved in veterinary medicine. This document addresses both issues. Topics covered include antibody selection, fixation, antigen retrieval, antibody incubation, antibody dilutions, tissue and reagent controls, buffers, and detection systems. The validation of an IHC test is addressed for both infectious diseases and neoplastic processes. In addition, storage and handling of IHC reagents, interpretation, quality control and assurance, and troubleshooting are also discussed. Proper standardization and validation of IHC will improve the quality of diagnostics in veterinary laboratories.


Vaccine | 1999

The efficacy of modified-live bovine respiratory syncytial virus vaccines in experimentally infected calves

Keith West; Lyall Petrie; Carrie Konoby; Deborah M. Haines; Victor S. Cortese; John Ellis

The efficacy of modified-live (MLV) bovine respiratory syncytial virus (BRSV) vaccines and the correlates of vaccine-induced immunity were investigated in calves using a virulent experimental infection. Clinical disease and pulmonary pathology were significantly reduced, relative to unvaccinated controls, in calves vaccinated according to label directions with commercial multivalent MLV BRSV vaccines. In vitro assays of cellular immunity were more consistent correlates of vaccine associated protection than presence of post vaccination serum antibody. Most vaccinated calves shed virus, but peak virus titre was suppressed compared to unvaccinated controls, with clearance coincident with the simultaneous appearance of mucosal antibody, cytotoxic cells in the lung and anamnestic or primary serum antibody responses. Virus clearance in unvaccinated calves was coincident with the appearance of BRSV specific cytotoxic cells, before mucosal antibody was detected.


Vaccine | 1999

The effect of formalin-inactivated vaccine on respiratory disease associated with bovine respiratory syncytial virus infection in calves.

Keith West; Lyall Petrie; Deborah M. Haines; Carrie Konoby; Edward Clark; Karen Martin; John Ellis

The effect of vaccination with a formalin-inactivated, alum-precipitated (FI), bovine respiratory syncytial virus (BRSV) vaccine on BRSV induced respiratory disease in calves was investigated. Six month old BRSV-naive calves were vaccinated with either a FI, a modified live virus (MLV), or virus antigen negative control vaccine (n = 4 per group). One month after the second vaccination, the calves were aerosol challenged with lung wash from a newborn calf infected with a field isolate of BRSV. Moderate to severe clinical disease occurred in all calves. Calves that received FI vaccine had a significantly earlier (day 2 vs. day 4-5) onset of pyrexia and dyspnea (P < 0.05). Pulmonary lesions, consisting of cranioventral atelectasis and dorsal emphysema, occurred in all groups. Two calves that received MLV, and three that received FI vaccine, had reduced pneumonic lung area relative to controls. Vaccination with the FI vaccine resulted in more rapid onset of clinical disease, but ultimately, reduced pulmonary pathology in most recipients.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2003

Porcine circovirus 2-associated disease in Eurasian wild boar.

John Ellis; Maria Spinato; Choon Yong; Keith West; Francis McNeilly; Brian Meehan; Seamus Kennedy; Edward Clark; Steven Krakowka; Gordon Allan

Porcine circovirus 2 (PCV2) was first identified in high-health herds of domestic swine and was associated with a debilitating disease called postweaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS). Most subsequent studies have indicated that PCV2 infects only swine but there is little information on porcids other than improved breeds of domestic swine. Multisystemic disease was reported in a group of Eurasian wild boars raised under free-range conditions. Affected young pigs had pneumonia and enteritis and were cachectic. Porcine circovirus 2 was identified in affected tissue by immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization, and a PCV2-like virus was isolated from pooled organs. The open reading frame (ORF2) of the isolated PCV2 had a 98.7% homology with the ORF2 of a reference PCV2 isolate. These diagnostic data indicate that PCV2 can infect and cause disease in Sus scrofa subspecies other than domestic swine.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2005

An Outbreak of Sheep-Associated Malignant Catarrhal Fever in Bison (Bison Bison) after Exposure to Sheep at a Public Auction Sale

John Berezowski; Greg D. Appleyard; Timothy B. Crawford; Jerry Haigh; Hong Li; Dorothy M. Middleton; Brendan P. O'Connor; Keith West; Murray R. Woodbury

An outbreak of malignant catarrhal fever (MCF) among bison sold at an auction market was studied for an 18-month period. Forty-five of 163 bison submitted for sale from 8 different bison farms died on 7 other destination farms. The outbreak began on day 50 after the sale, peaked between days 60 and 70, and ended on day 220. Twenty-one dead bison were confirmed to be MCF cases by clinical histories, pathology, and detection of ovine herpesvirus-2 DNA in their tissues with polymerase chain reaction assays. Twenty-four dead bison were classified as suspect MCF cases from clinical histories. No cases of MCF were observed among bison remaining on originating farms or resident bison mixed with sale bison on destination farms. There were no sheep reported within 3 km of originating or destination farms, limiting bison exposure to sheep to the auction facility, where sheep were present for less than 1 day. The outbreak provides an illustration of the temporal distribution of MCF mortality expected in bison and an estimate of the time from exposure until death from MCF after a single short exposure to sheep. The study provides evidence that bison with MCF do not transmit MCF to other bison.


Canadian Veterinary Journal-revue Veterinaire Canadienne | 2001

Multiple porcine circovirus 2-associated abortions and reproductive failure in a multisite swine production unit.

O'Connor B; Gauvreau H; Keith West; Bogdan J; Ayroud M; Edward Clark; Konoby C; Gordon Allan; John Ellis


Canadian Journal of Veterinary Research-revue Canadienne De Recherche Veterinaire | 1998

Lesions and distribution of viral antigen following an experimental infection of young seronegative calves with virulent bovine virus diarrhea virus-type II.

John Ellis; Keith West; Cortese Vs; Myers Sl; Carman S; Martin Km; Deborah M. Haines


Canadian Veterinary Journal-revue Veterinaire Canadienne | 2002

Coinfection with bovine viral diarrhea virus and Mycoplasma bovis in feedlot cattle with chronic pneumonia

Farshid Shahriar; Edward Clark; Eugene D. Janzen; Keith West; Gary A. Wobeser

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Gordon Allan

Queen's University Belfast

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Carrie Konoby

University of Saskatchewan

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Deborah Haines

University of Saskatchewan

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Karen Martin

Western University College of Veterinary Medicine

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Francis McNeilly

Queen's University Belfast

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Hong Li

Agricultural Research Service

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Carrie Rhodes

University of Saskatchewan

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