Lúcio Esmeraldo Honório de Melo
Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco
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Featured researches published by Lúcio Esmeraldo Honório de Melo.
Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2007
Rossemberg Cardoso Barbosa; Franklin Riet-Correa; Everton F. Lima; Rosane M.T. Medeiros; Karla M. R. Guedes; Dale R. Gardner; Russell J. Molyneux; Lúcio Esmeraldo Honório de Melo
Ipomoea sericophylla and Ipomoea riedelii cause a glycoprotein storage disease in goats. This paper reports the experimental poisoning in goats by dried I. sericophylla and I. riedelii containing 0.05% and 0.01% swainsonine, respectively. Three groups with four animals each were used. Group 1 received daily doses of 2g/kg body weight (bw) of dried I. sericophylla (150mg of swainsonine/kg). Goats from this group had clinical signs 36-38 days after the start of ingestion. Group 2 received dried I. riedelii daily doses of 2g/kg of I. riedelii (30mg of swainsonine/kg) for 70 days. No clinical signs were observed, therefore the swainsonine dose was increased to 60mg/kg for another 70 days. Goats from Group 2 had clinical signs 26-65 days after increase in swainsonine dose to 60mg/kg. Group 3 was used as control. In these experiments the minimum toxic dose was 60mg/kg which represents 0.0004% of the dry matter in goats ingesting 1.5% bw of the dry matter. For goats ingesting 2%-2.5% bw of dry matter this dose would be 0.00024%-0.0003% of the dry matter. After the end of the experiment two goats were euthanized and another six were observed for recovery of clinical signs. Four goats that continued to consume swainsonine containing plant for 39-89 days after the first clinical signs had non reversible signs, while two goats that ingested the plant for only 15 and 20 days after the first clinical signs recovered completely. These and previous results indicate that irreversible lesions due to neuronal loss occur in goats that continue to ingest the plants for about 30 days after the first clinical signs. Clinical signs and histological lesions were similar to those reported previously for goats poisoned by swainsonine containing plants. No significant alterations were found in packed cell volume, red and white blood cell counts, hemoglobin and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentrations, mean corpuscular volume, and serum levels of glucose, total protein, and albumin, and the serum activities of gamma glutamyl transferase and aspartate aminotransferase. Swainsonine concentration of 0.05% in I. sericophylla and 0.01% in I. riedelii are different from samples of these plants used in previous experiments, which contained 0.14% and 0.5% swainsonine, respectively, demonstrating a wide variation in the toxicity of different samples.
Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2012
Lúcio Esmeraldo Honório de Melo; Rinaldo Aparecido Mota; Frederico Celso Lyra Maia; Artur C.C. Fernandes; Tamyres I.B. Silva; Jacinta Eufrásia Brito Leite; Luiz Carlos Fontes Baptista Filho; Carlos A. N. Ramos
For a long time, it was believed that the goat species is resistant to infection by Mycobacterium bovis; however, this hypothesis changed when reports of the disease became apparent in various countries. Nevertheless, certain characteristics of tuberculosis in goats and its impact on public health are still unknown. The objective of this study was to describe nosologic, radiologic, anatomo-histopathological, bacilloscopic and biomolecular aspects of tuberculosis in dairy goats with respiratory disease naturally infected, from the state of Pernambuco, Brazil. When we tuberculinized 442 goats with respiratory symptoms, 3.4% (15/442) of these were considered positive in the test. From the positive goats, seven were monitored clinically for 12 months. The etiological agent was identified through the polymerase chain reaction, by amplification of genomic sequences of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex and later Mycobacterium bovis. This is the first molecular diagnosis which characterizes the involvement of Mycobacterium bovis in goat tuberculosis in Brazil.
Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2010
Fábio de Souza Mendonça; Joaquim Evêncio-Neto; Lígia Reis de Moura Estevão; Lúcio Esmeraldo Honório de Melo; Silvio Henrique de Freitas; Laura Peixoto de Arruda; Fabiana M. Boabaid; Edson Moleta Colodel
In order to confirm the susceptibility of goats to the poisoning by Stryphnodendron fissuratum Mart. (Leg. Mimosoideae) and to characterize the clinical disease, the pods of the plant were given orally to each of eight young goats and in fractioned doses to other two. The lowest lethal dose was 10g/kg. The same dose was the lowest that induced disease. Doses of 20g/kg and 40g/kg caused pronounced clinical signs and doses of 5g/kg did not caused signs. Fractioned doses of 5g/kg during four days also caused pronounced signs. In each groups the first signs of poisoning were observed from the first day of experiments and the changes ranged from 4-25 days. The disease was characterized mainly by digestive and nervous disorders. Clinical signs were partial to complete anorexia, dehydration, decrease in ruminal activity up to atonia, tympanism, constant vocalizations, grinding of the teeth pain up on abdominal palpation, apathy, ataxia, depression, dysmetria, head and muscle tremors, weakness, difficulty in rising, sternal or lateral recumbency and death. Some goats presented extense hair loss in the skin of the dorsum; one goat presented liquid and black fetid feces. Other signs included loss of ruminal fluid during rumination, drooling, serous nasal and ocular discharges. Liver and kidney function tests had resulted in slight changes. AST serum levels were slightly increased and creatine phosphokinase levels were highly increased. These changes can associated to the effects of triterpenic saponins contained in the S. fissuratum pods.
Historia Ciencias Saude-manguinhos | 2010
Lúcio Esmeraldo Honório de Melo; Francisco de Oliveira Magalhães; Argus Vasconcelos de Almeida; Cláudio Augusto Gomes da Câmara
The historical aspects of animal medicine indicate an epistemological break with the old practices of animal medical treatment, with introduction of the principles of rationality in the eighteenth century in the formation of veterinary doctors. These healing practices, meanwhile, did not begin with the implementation of graduate courses in animal medicine. In colonial Brazil and, in particular, in the State of Pernambuco, historical records can be found of animal medical practices that were later incorporated into the curriculum of the São Bento de Olinda Graduate School of Veterinary, marked by the presence of a unique evaluation in Brazil: the physicum examination.
Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2008
Taciana Rabelo Ramalho Ramos; José Wilton Pinheiro Junior; Pedro Alves de Moura Sobrinho; Vânia Lúcia de Assis Santana; Neurisvan Ramos Guerra; Lúcio Esmeraldo Honório de Melo; Rinaldo Aparecido Mota
Arquivos do Instituto Biológico | 2011
E. I. Mendes; Lúcio Esmeraldo Honório de Melo; T. G.S. Tenório; L. M. Sá; R. J.C. Souto; A. C.C. Fernandes; H. M.M. Sandes; T. I.B. Silva
Pesquisa Agropecuaria Brasileira | 1993
Roberto Soares de Castro; Lúcio Esmeraldo Honório de Melo; Sílvio Romero de Oliveira Abreu; Ana Maria M. Muniz; Ana Paula S. Albuquerque
Arquivo Brasileiro De Medicina Veterinaria E Zootecnia | 1995
F. F Silva; Roberto Soares de Castro; Lúcio Esmeraldo Honório de Melo; S. R. O Abreu; A. M. M Muniz
Ciência Veterinária nos Trópicos | 2003
Adriano Fernandes Ferreira; Eneida Willcox Rêgo; Lúcio Esmeraldo Honório de Melo; Mauro Tavares de Melo; Emerson Israel Mendes; Roniery C. G. Gallndo; Érika S. B. Menezes
Arquivo Brasileiro De Medicina Veterinaria E Zootecnia | 2017
T.I.B. Silva; L.A.K. Melchior; L.C.F. Baptista Filho; A.C.C. Fernandes; L.G. Silva; K.F. Vasconcelos; R.G. Revorêdo; D.D. Silva; Lúcio Esmeraldo Honório de Melo