Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Priscila Regina Guerra is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Priscila Regina Guerra.


Journal of Food Protection | 2012

Longitudinal dissemination of Salmonella enterica clonal groups through the slaughter process of Salmonella-positive pig batches.

Luis Eduardo da Silva; Vanessa Dias; Andréia Inês Ferronatto; Priscila Regina Guerra; Laís Berno; Nelise Triches; Jalusa Deon Kich; Luis Gustavo Corbellini; Marisa Ribeiro de Itapema Cardoso

This study was conducted to assess the dissemination of Salmonella clonal groups in slaughterhouses that received batches of Salmonella -positive pigs and used different routine processing procedures. Eight serial sampling sessions were conducted in three slaughterhouses (A, B, and C). Blood was collected randomly (n = 25) from each batch of pigs and processed for serology. Carcasses (n = 12) were identified and sampled after dehairing, after singeing, after evisceration, and before chilling. A section of cecum also was collected. Salmonella isolates were submitted to pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. The overall seroprevalence of Salmonella was 80.6% (316 of 392 samples), and cecal contents were positive for Salmonella in 23.8% (26 of 109) of the pigs sampled. Carcasses after dehairing had a significantly higher prevalence of Salmonella (P = 0.004) and the highest Salmonella levels (median = 0.26 log CFU/300 cm(2)). The singeing step significantly affected the Salmonella status of the carcasses (P = 0.001); however, the efficacy of singeing differed among slaughterhouses. In the prechilling step, 14.7% (16 of 109) of the carcasses were positive for Salmonella. Salmonella pulsotypes found on the prechill carcasses were also found in the lairage, in the cecal contents, and on carcasses after dehairing, suggesting that the main source of contamination was the slaughter process before singeing. Slaughterhouse C was the most likely (odds ration [OR] = 6.51) to have pigs carrying Salmonella in the gut, and slaughterhouse B was the most likely (OR = 14.66) to have contaminated carcasses at the prechilling step. These findings indicate that the procedures adopted in slaughterhouse B contributed to the spread of Salmonella strains. In contrast, in slaughterhouse C the Salmonella strains carried by the pigs or found in the lairage were not recovered from prechilled carcasses, validating the effectiveness of the slaughterhouse interventions. These results indicate that an effective slaughter process can help decrease the number of Salmonella-positive carcasses in slaughterhouses that receive Salmonella-positive pig batches.


Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine | 2014

OSTEOMYELITIS CAUSED BY SALMONELLA ENTERICA SEROVAR DERBY IN BOA CONSTRICTOR

Suyene Oltramari de Souza; Renata Assis Casagrande; Priscila Regina Guerra; Claudio Estevao Farias da Cruz; Evandro Veit; Marisa Ribeiro de Itapema Cardoso; David Driemeier

Abstract:  After demonstrating chronic weight loss, prostration, and muscle flaccidness, a captive-bred 9-mo-old boa constrictor (Boa constrictor constrictor) died and was submitted for necropsy. Along the spinal column there were multiple, yellowish white, macroscopic nodules of 1–5 mm in diameter in the ventral side of the vertebral body and in the intervertebral spaces. Severe multifocal necrotizing osteomyelitis associated with granulomatous inflammation was the main histologic finding in the vertebral column. In the liver, there was discrete but similar granulomatous changes. Positive anti-Salmonella immunostaining was observed in the spinal column and in the liver. Salmonella enterica serovar Derby was isolated from fragments of the spinal column. These bacteria are important cause of disease in captive reptiles.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2014

Diagnóstico imuno-histoquímico e caracterização anatomopatológica de Mycoplasma gallisepticum em galinhas de subsistência

R. A. Casagrande; Luiza Amaral de Castro; Veronica Machado Rolim; Flademir Wouters; Fabiana M. Boabaid; Suyene Oltramari de Souza; Priscila Regina Guerra; Sergio Ceroni da Silva; David Driemeier

Avian mycoplasmosis is caused by bacteria from the Mycoplasmataceae family. Mycoplasma gallisepticum (MG) is the most pathogenic and economically significant species affecting poultry. The aim of this study was to use the immunohistochemistry technique (IHC) as a diagnostic method for the MG infection in poultry. In this report we described two outbreaks of mycoplasmosis caused by MG in free-range chickens. Clinical signs were characterized by prostration, decreased appetite, difficult breathing, nasal and ocular discharge. Necropsy findings were serous secretion in conjunctiva (7/10) and seioses (4/10), edema and caseous exudate; air sacs thickened with foam and caseous exudate (6/10); trachea diffusely reddish (4/10); lungs with 0.5 cm whitish spots (2/10); and pericardial sac with fibrin exudate (2/10). Histologically was observed a lymphoplasmacytic hyperplastic acute tracheitis (10/10), seiositis (5/5) and conjunctivitis (3/4); fibrinonecrotic bronchopneumonia (5/10); acute fibrinous pericarditis (2/10); and fibrinonecrotic aerosaculitis (1/1). IHC anti-MG stained in the extracellular surface of ciliated brush border and/or in the top of epithelium of trachea (10/10), bronchi (5/10) and sinuses (4/5). In seven out of ten cases it was possible to detect MG by real-time PCR from tracheal swabs. IHC anti-MG used as a diagnostic method showed good correlation with clinical signs, lesions and real-time PCR results.


Archives of Veterinary Science | 2012

DISTRIBUIÇÃO DE GRUPOS CLONAIS DE Listeria monocytogenes EM CARCAÇAS E NO AMBIENTE DE MATADOUROS FRIGORÍFICOS DE SUÍNOS

Andréia Inês Ferronatto; Débora da Cruz Payão Pellegrini; Priscila Regina Guerra; Marisa Ribeiro de Itapema Cardoso


Veterinária em Foco | 2013

Espécies do gênero Helicobacter de importância em medicina veterinária: revisão de literatura

Priscila Regina Guerra; Anelise Bonilla Trindade; Vanessa Dias; I. Cardoso


Acta Scientiae Veterinariae | 2012

Linfadenite caseosa como causa de paralisia de membros pélvicos em ovinos no Estado do Rio Grande do Sul

Suyene Oltramari de Souza; Luiza Aita de Lemos; Angélica Terezinha Barth Wouters; Flademir Wouters; Fabiana M. Boabaid; Renata Assis Casagrande; Tatiane Terumi Negrão Watanabe; Priscila Regina Guerra; David Driemeier


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2017

Caracterização anatomopatológica e bacteriológica em frangos de corte condenados totalmente por colibacilose sob Serviço de Inspeção Federal

Renata Assis Casagrande; Gustavo Machado; Priscila Regina Guerra; Luiza Amaral de Castro; Andréia Spanamberg; Sergio Ceroni da Silva; Marisa Ribeiro de Itapema Cardoso; David Driemeier


Acta Scientiae Veterinariae | 2015

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus pseudintermedius Clonal Groups Isolated from Canine Pyoderma in Brazil

Graciela Volz Lopes; Priscila Regina Guerra; Verônica Machado; Vanessa Dias; Marisa Ribeiro de Itapema Cardoso


Veterinaria em foco | 2013

Main species of genus Helicobacter reported in veterinary medicine: review.

Priscila Regina Guerra; A. B. Trindade; Vanessa Dias; M. R. de I. Cardoso


Archive | 2012

Linfadenite caseosa como causa de paralisia de membros pélvicos em ovinos no Estado do Rio Grande do Sul Caseous Lymphadenitis as a Cause of Hind Limb Paralysis in Sheep in Rio Grande do Sul State

Suyene Oltramari de Souza; Luiza Aita de Lemos; Angelica Terezinha; Barth Wouters; Flademir Wouters; Fabiana M. Boabaid; Renata Assis Casagrande; Tatiane Terumi; Negrão Watanabe; Priscila Regina Guerra; David Driemeier

Collaboration


Dive into the Priscila Regina Guerra's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marisa Ribeiro de Itapema Cardoso

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Driemeier

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fabiana M. Boabaid

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Flademir Wouters

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Suyene Oltramari de Souza

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thais de Campos

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vanessa Dias

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sandra Maria Ferraz

Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andréia Inês Ferronatto

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge