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Dive into the research topics where Raquel Aparecida Sales da Cruz is active.

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Featured researches published by Raquel Aparecida Sales da Cruz.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2010

Detecção molecular de herpesvírus bovino 1 e 5 em amostras de encéfalo conservadas em formol e emblocadas em parafina provenientes de bovinos com doença neurológica

Laura Peixoto de Arruda; Luciano Nakazato; Valéria Dutra; Ricardo A.A. Lemos; Ana Paula A. Nogueira; Raquel Aparecida Sales da Cruz; Caroline Argenta Pescador; Edson Moleta Colodel

Bovine herpesvirus (BoHV) is an important cause of neurological disease in cattle in the Midwest Brazil. The application of molecular diagnostic techniques represents an important contribution for the study of BoHV. This paper describes the detection of BoHV-5 and BoHV-1 by a specific multiplex PCR assay in 76 paraffin-embedded samples from central nervous system (CNS) of cattle with neurological disorders. The samples were divided into 2 groups according to the histological features: Group 1 was composed of 40 cases of necrotizing meningoencephalitis (characteristic of BoHV infection), and Group 2 was composed of 36 cases of nonspecific nonsuppurative meningoencephalitis. Positive results for BoHV-5 accounted for 40% of the samples in the group 1 and 33% in the group 2. No detection of BoHV-1 was recorded.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2016

Characterization of spinal cord lesions in cattle and horses with rabies the importance of correct sampling

Daniele Mariath Bassuino; Guilherme Konradt; Raquel Aparecida Sales da Cruz; Gustavo S. Silva; Danilo Carloto Gomes; Saulo Petinatti Pavarini; David Driemeier

Twenty-six cattle and 7 horses were diagnosed with rabies. Samples of brain and spinal cord were processed for hematoxylin and eosin staining and immunohistochemistry (IHC). In addition, refrigerated fragments of brain and spinal cord were tested by direct fluorescent antibody test and intracerebral inoculation in mice. Statistical analyses and Fisher exact test were performed by commercial software. Histologic lesions were observed in the spinal cord in all of the cattle and horses. Inflammatory lesions in horses were moderate at the thoracic, lumbar, and sacral levels, and marked at the lumbar enlargement level. Gitter cells were present in large numbers in the lumbar enlargement region. IHC staining intensity ranged from moderate to strong. Inflammatory lesions in cattle were moderate in all spinal cord sections, and gitter cells were present in small numbers. IHC staining intensity was strong in all spinal cord sections. Only 2 horses exhibited lesions in the brain, which were located mainly in the obex and cerebellum; different from that observed in cattle, which had lesions in 25 cases. Fisher exact test showed that the odds of detecting lesions caused by rabies in horses are 3.5 times higher when spinal cord sections are analyzed, as compared to analysis of brain samples alone.


Research in Veterinary Science | 2017

Identification of bluetongue virus serotypes 1, 4, and 17 co-infections in sheep flocks during outbreaks in Brazil

Lorena Lima Barbosa Guimarães; Júlio César Câmara Rosa; Ana Carolina Diniz Matos; Raquel Aparecida Sales da Cruz; Maria Isabel Maldonado Coelho Guedes; Fernanda Alves Dorella; Henrique César Pereira Figueiredo; Saulo Petinatti Pavarini; Luciana Sonne; Zélia Inês Portela Lobato; David Driemeier

Bluetongue (BT) is a vector-borne viral disease caused by the Bluetongue virus (BTV), an Orbivirus from the Reoviridae family, affecting domestic and wild ruminants. BTV circulation in Brazil was first reported in 1978, and several serological surveys indicate that the virus is widespread, although with varied prevalence. In 2014, BT outbreaks affected sheep flocks in Rio Grande do Sul state, causing significant mortality (18.4%; 91/495) in BTV-infected sheep. In total, seven farms were monitored, and one or two sheep from each farm that died due to clinical signs of BT were necropsied. Apathy, pyrexia, anorexia, tachycardia, respiratory, and digestive disorders were noted. Additionally, an abortion was recorded in one of the monitored farms. The main gross lesions observed were pulmonary edema, anterior-ventral pulmonary consolidation, muscular necrosis in the esophagus and in the ventral serratus muscle, and hemorrhagic lesions in the heart. The blood and tissue samples were tested for BTV RNA detection by RT-qPCR targeting the segment 10. Positive samples were used for viral isolation. The isolated BTVs were typed by conventional RT-PCR targeting the segment 2 of the 26 BTV serotypes, followed by sequencing analysis. BTV-1, BTV-4 and BTV-17 were identified in the analyzed samples. Double or triple BTV co-infections with these serotypes were detected. We report the occurrence of BT outbreaks related to BTV-1, BTV-4 and BTV-17 infections and co-infections causing clinical signs in sheep flocks in Southern Brazil, with significant mortality and lethality rates.


Journal of Veterinary Science | 2018

Piglet colibacillosis diagnosis based on multiplex polymerase chain reaction and immunohistochemistry of paraffin-embedded tissues.

Cíntia de Lorenzo; Caroline Pinto de Andrade; Verônica Silveira Luiz Machado; Matheus Viezzer Bianchi; Veronica Machado Rolim; Raquel Aparecida Sales da Cruz; David Driemeier

Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) causes diarrhea in pigs, referred to as colibacillosis. The aim of this study was to optimize multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and immunohistochemistry (IHC) analyses of paraffin-embedded material to detect pathogenic E. coli strains causing colibacillosis in pigs. Multiplex PCR was optimized for fimbriae (F18, F4, F6, F5, and F41) and toxins (types A and B heat-stable toxins [STaP and STb], heat-labile toxin [LT], and type 2 Shiga toxin [STx2e]), and IHC was optimized for an anti-E. coli polyclonal antibody. Samples (132) from pigs received between 2006 and 2014 with clinical and histopathological diagnoses of colibacillosis were analyzed. E. coli was detected by IHC in 78.7%, and at least one virulence factor gene was detected in 71.2%. Pathogenic strains of ETEC with at least one fimbria and one toxin were detected in 40% of the samples in multiplex PCR. The most frequent virulence types were F18-STaP (7.5%), F18-STaP-STb (5.7%), and F4-STaP (3.8%). A statistically significant association was noted between virulence factors F4, F18, STaP, and STb and positive immunostaining results. Colibacillosis diagnosis through multiplex PCR and IHC of paraffin-embedded tissues is a practical approach, as samples can be fixed and stored for long periods before analysis.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2013

NATURAL INFECTION BY Trypanosoma cruzi IN ONE DOG IN CENTRAL WESTERN BRAZIL: A CASE REPORT

Arleana do Bom Parto Ferreira de Almeida; Daphine Ariadne Jesus de Paula; Maria Luisa Paro Otton; Felipe Wolf Jaune; Raquel Aparecida Sales da Cruz; Maria de Fátima Madeira; Luciano Nakazato; Adriane Jorge Mendonça; Caroline Argenta Pescador; Valéria Régia Franco Sousa

SUMMARY It is estimated that about 10 million people are infected with Trypanosoma cruzi worldwide, mostly in Latin America and more than 25 million are at risk of acquiring this infection in endemic areas. Dogs are an important reservoir for this pathogen and thus, considered a risk factor for human populations. This report describes one case of Chagas disease in a dog from Cuiaba, Mato Grosso State, Brazil. The diagnosis was obtained by direct examination of trypomastigote forms in blood smears. Amastigotes forms were visualized in microscopy of the bone marrow, lymph nodes, kidneys, liver and brain. The T. cruzi (ZIII) infection was confirmed by Polymerase Chain Reaction, and sequencing. The animal presented multisystemic failure and died. Although acute Chagas disease in humans is not reported in Cuiaba, this is the first report of a canine case in this region. This case represents a warning, to health professionals and authorities, to the possibility of transmission of this zoonosis in Cuiaba.


Veterinary Pathology | 2018

Granulomatous Necrotizing Myositis in Swine Affected by Porcine Circovirus Disease

Guilherme Konradt; Raquel Aparecida Sales da Cruz; Daniele Mariath Bassuino; Matheus Viezzer Bianchi; Caroline Pinto de Andrade; Fernando Augusto Boeira Sabino da Silva; David Driemeier; Saulo Petinatti Pavarini

Porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2) is associated with multiple clinical syndromes in pigs, known as porcine circovirus diseases. This work describes an outbreak of porcine circovirus diseases with severe lesions affecting the skeletal muscle. Ninety-two pigs had apathy, weight loss, and diarrhea over a clinical course of 7 to 10 days. Approximately 30 of the pigs had stiff gait, muscle weakness, hind limb paresis, and recumbency. Twelve of the 92 pigs were necropsied, and 4 had pale discoloration of skeletal muscles with microscopic lesions of granulomatous necrotizing myositis. Immunohistochemistry of skeletal muscle showed that PCV2 antigen was located primarily in the cytoplasm and nuclei of macrophages, lymphocytes, and multinucleated giant cells, with a lower amount in the cytoplasm of endothelial cells, necrotic fibers, and satellite cells. Affected muscle samples were polymerase chain reaction–positive for PCV2 and the amplicon exhibited 99% identity with sequences belonging to the PCV2b genotype. Locomotor clinical signs and granulomatous necrotizing myositis should be considered as another expression of PCV2 infection in pigs.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2018

Diarrhea caused by rotavirus A, B, and C in suckling piglets from southern Brazil: molecular detection and histologic and immunohistochemical characterization

Paula Rodrigues de Almeida; Elis Lorenzetti; Raquel Aparecida Sales da Cruz; Tatiane Terumi Negrão Watanabe; Priscila Zlotowski; Amauri A. Alfieri; David Driemeier

Rotavirus (RV) is an important viral pathogen causing diarrhea in piglets and other mammals worldwide. We describe 34 cases from 4 diarrheal outbreaks caused by RV in unvaccinated farrowing units in southern Brazil from 2011 to 2013. We performed autopsy, histologic examinations, bacterial culture, RV immunohistochemistry (IHC), and enteric virus detection through molecular assays for rotavirus A, B, and C, transmissible gastroenteritis virus, porcine epidemic diarrhea virus, sapovirus, norovirus, and kobuvirus. Histologically, villus atrophy (29 of 34) and epithelial vacuolation (27 of 34) occurred in all 4 outbreaks. Cell debris in the lamina propria occurred in 20 cases, mostly from outbreaks A (8 of 11), C (4 of 6), and D (7 of 11). IHC was positive for RV in 21 of 34 samples. RT-PCR was positive for RV in 20 of 30 samples; RV-C was the most frequently detected RV (n = 17). Kobuvirus was detected in 11 samples, and, in 3 of them, there was single detection of this enteric virus.


Small Ruminant Research | 2018

Hereditary microphthalmia in Texel lambs in Brazil

Maiara Aline Gonçalves; Paula Reis Pereira; Raquel Aparecida Sales da Cruz; Welden Panziera; Danilo Giorgi Abranches de Andrade; Jose P. Oliveira-Filho; Alexandre Secorun Borges; Luciana Sonne; David Driemeier


Semina-ciencias Agrarias | 2018

Nasal peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor in a heifer: case report

Fernando Froner Argenta; M. E. Hammerschmitt; Matheus de Oliveira Reis; Raquel Aparecida Sales da Cruz; Cíntia de Lorenzo; Luciana Sonne; David Driemeier; Saulo Petinatti Pavarini


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2018

Hypomyelinogenesis associated with transplacental poisoning by Sida carpinifolia (Malvaceae) in fetus and newborn calves

Matheus de Oliveira Reis; Raquel Aparecida Sales da Cruz; Daniele Mariath Bassuino; Fabiana M. Boabaid; Luiz Gustavo Schneider de Oliveira; Lauren Santos de Mello; Luciana Sonne; David Driemeier

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David Driemeier

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Luciana Sonne

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Saulo Petinatti Pavarini

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Caroline Argenta Pescador

Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso

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Matheus de Oliveira Reis

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Caroline Pinto de Andrade

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Maiara Aline Gonçalves

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Cíntia de Lorenzo

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Daniele Mariath Bassuino

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Edson Moleta Colodel

Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso

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