Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ricardo B. Lucena is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ricardo B. Lucena.


Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2011

A Retrospective Study of 586 Tumours in Brazilian Cattle

Ricardo B. Lucena; Daniel R. Rissi; Glaucia D. Kommers; Felipe Pierezan; José C Oliveira-Filho; Juliana Targino Silva Almeida Macêdo; Mariana M. Flores; Claudio S.L. Barros

Records from 6,706 necropsy examinations of cattle performed over a 45-year period were surveyed and 586 cases of neoplasia were identified. The organ system most frequently affected by neoplastic disease (n=139 cases) was the alimentary tract. This finding was attributed to a high incidence of squamous cell carcinoma of the upper alimentary tract associated with the chronic ingestion of bracken fern (Pteridium aquilinum). This carcinogenic plant was also associated with a relatively high incidence (n=35 cases) of urinary bladder tumours (enzootic haematuria). Tumours of the alimentary tract were followed, in decreasing order of frequency, by tumours of the skin and subcutis (n=129 cases), haemopoietic tissue (n=101 cases), the eye and periorbital tissues (n=88 cases), the urinary system (n=44 cases), the female reproductive system (n=21 cases), the endocrine system (n=16 cases), the liver and pancreas (n=12 cases), the nervous system (n=6 cases), the respiratory system (n=6 cases) and the mammary gland (n=1 case). The primary anatomical location of 16 tumours was undetermined.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2010

Doenças de bovinos no Sul do Brasil: 6.706 casos

Ricardo B. Lucena; Felipe Pierezan; Glaucia D. Kommers; Luiz Francisco Irigoyen; Rafael A. Fighera; Claudio Santos Liborio Barros

The diseases affecting cattle in southern Brazil were studied through a review of the necropsy reports filed at the Laboratorio de Patologia Veterinaria of the Universidade Federal de Santa Maria (LPV-UFSM), Rio Grande do Sul, and pertaining to the examination of 6.076 cattle during 1964-2008. Of those exams 29.9% were necropsies performed at the LPV-UFSM and 79.1% were mailed-in organ fragments from necropsies performed at the field by veterinary practitioners. Autolysis and non-representative sampling o mailed in organs were the main reasons for non-conclusive diagnosis. Poisoning by Senecio spp. was the main cause of death in cattle in this study and poisonous plants together with toxi-infections accounted for 22.8% of the cases with conclusive diagnosis. Inflammatory diseases together with parasitic diseases accounted for more than 30% of cattle diseases and babesiosis and anaplasmosis were the main diseases in this category. Other categories were distributed in the following order: neoplasms and tumor-like lesions (13.87%), diseases caused by physical agents (2.7%), metabolic and nutritional diseases (2.46%), circulatory disturbances (1.4%), degenerative diseases (1.1%), developmental disorders (0.54%), iatrogenic diseases and sundry lesions. The high prevalence of tumors in cattle in this study was attributed to the chronic ingestion of Pteridium aquilinum, a common toxicosis in the region. The main diseases in cattle from the studied region are related to environmental factors associated to the predominantly husbandry practices adopted in the region.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2010

Intoxicação por alcaloides pirrolizidínicos em ruminantes e equinos no Brasil

Ricardo B. Lucena; Daniel R. Rissi; Lisanka A. Maia; Mariana M. Flores; A. F. M. Dantas; Verônica M.T. Nobre; Franklin Riet-Correa; Claudio S.L. Barros

Casos de intoxicacao por alcaloides pirrolizidinicos (APs) em ruminantes e equinos foram investigados retrospectivamente atraves do acesso aos arquivos de dois laboratorios de diagnostico veterinario no Sul e Nordeste brasileiro. Os dados obtidos foram comparados com aqueles retirados da literatura concernentes a surtos dessa toxicose no Brasil, onde ela e associada com a ingestao de plantas que contem APs dos generos Senecio, Crotalaria e Echium. Formas aguda e cronica da toxicose foram encontradas. A doenca aguda foi observada em associacao com a ingestao de Crotalaria retusa em ovinos e caprinos. C. retusa e Senecio spp. tambem foram responsaveis pela intoxicacao cronica em bovinos, equinos e ovinos. A intoxicacao por APs e uma importante causa de morte em animais pecuarios no Brasil. Essa e a principal causa de morte em bovinos na regiao Central do Rio Grande do Sul e uma das principais causas de morte em equinos na Paraiba. A epidemiologia, os sinais clinicos, a patologia e a importância da intoxicacao por APs sao descritos e discutidos.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2011

Intoxicação espontânea por fedegoso em bovinos: relato de 16 surtos

Priscila M. S Carmo; Luiz Francisco Irigoyen; Ricardo B. Lucena; Rafael A. Fighera; Glaucia D. Kommers; Claudio S.L. Barros

Sixteen outbreaks of Senna occidentalis (coffee senna) that occurred in cattle in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, were reviewed. The great majority (75%) of the outbreaks occurred in adult cattle at pasture during the autumn and winter months with 50% in May, evidencing a striking seasonality. Mortality rates varied from 4.2% to 55.2% and cattle died 2 days up to 2 weeks after showing clinical signs that included dry feces (occasionally diarrhea), muscle weakness, reluctance to move, tachypnea, instability of the hind limbs with dragging of the toes, tremors in muscles of the thighs, neck, and head, ear dropping, sternal recumbency, lateral recumbency and death. Myoglobinuria characterized by a dark red or black discolored urine was a consistent finding in cattle affected at pasture but not in those poisoned by ration contaminated with coffee senna beans. Creatine phosphokinase serum activity was marked ly elevated. Main gross changes observed in 23 necropsies involved skeletal muscles of the hind limbs. These changes consisted of varying degrees of paleness of muscle groups. Subepicardial and subendocardial hemorrhages were present in the hearts of all affected cattle. Histologically a segmental degenerative myopathy of striated muscles was present in every case and had a multifocal polyphasic or monophasic character. Myocardial (3/23), hepatic (3/13), renal (3/10), and splenic (1/6) microscopic lesions were observed occasionally. Myocardial lesions were mild and consisted of vacuolation of cardiomyocytes or focal fibrosis. Hepatic changes consisted of diffuse hepatocelular vacuolation, cytosegrosomes within hepatocytes, and individual hepatocellular necrosis. Kidneys had vacuolar degeneration of tubular epithelium associated with acidophilic casts (proteinosis) within tubular lumina. In the spleen there was marked necrosis of lymphocytes of the white pulp. No histological changes were found in the brains of 13 affected cattle. The data of this study suggest that coffee senna poisoning is an important cause of death in cattle in southern Brazil.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2009

Polioencefalomalacia em bovinos: epidemiologia, sinais clínicos e distribuição das lesões no encéfalo

Fabiano J.F. de Sant'Ana; Daniel R. Rissi; Ricardo B. Lucena; Ricardo A.A. Lemos; Ana Paula A. Nogueira; Claudio S.L. Barros

Thirty one cases of polioencephalomalacia (PEM) diagnosed from 1999-2008 in cattle from the Southern (13 cases) and Midwestern (18 cases) Brazil were studied. Morbidity (0.04%-6.66 %), mortality (0.04%-6.66 %), and lethality (50%-100%) rates were similar in both regions studied. There was no clear association between PEM cases and age, sex or seasonality. Cases occurred mainly in cattle raised at pasture; in the Southern the disease affected mainly young cattle (one-year old or less) while mainly older cattle (three-year-old or older) were affected in the Midwest. Clinical signs more frequently observed included blindness, incoordination, circling, opisthotonus, recumbence and peddling movements. Clinical course varied from 12 hours to 8 days (average three days and a half). In 11 cases no gross changes were observed in the brain. Main gross findings in the brain of remaining cases included congestion with swelling and flattening of gyri, softening and yellow discoloration of cerebral cortex, hemorrhagic foci in the brain stem, cerebellum and telencephalon, and cerebellar herniation. The main histopathological changes were in the cortex of occipital, parietal and frontal telencephalic lobes; however less prominent and less frequently found lesions occurred in the hippocampus, basal nuclei, thalamus, midbrain, and cerebellum. The type of microscopic cortical lesions was consistent in all cases and included segmentar laminar neuronal necrosis (red neurons), spongiosis, swollen of vascular endothelial nuclei, Alzheimer type II astrocytes and infiltration of gitter cells. In 20% of the cases there was mild lymphohistiocytic cellular infiltrate and in 13% of the cases there was mild infiltrate by neutrophils and eosinophils. Additionally, mild to moderate necro-hemorrhagic lesions were observed in 49% of the cases in the basal nuclei, in 39% of the cases in brain stem and in 26% of the cases in the thalamus. Brain lesions were consistently found in the cortical laminae of the occipital, parietal and frontal telencephalic lobes. In such locations, most frequently affected cortical layers both by neuronal necrosis and edema were external and internal granular layers. Both gyri and sulci were equally affected.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2010

Abordagem diagnóstica das principais doenças do sistema nervoso de ruminantes e equinos no Brasil

Daniel R. Rissi; Felipe Pierezan; José C Oliveira-Filho; Ricardo B. Lucena; Priscila M. S Carmo; Claudio S.L. Barros

The epidemiological, clinical, and pathological hallmarks of neurological diseases of ruminants and horses diagnosed in the Laboratory of Veterinary Pathology (LVP) of the Universidade Federal de Santa Maria (UFSM) are herein described. This paper is intended to work as a compiled database for practitioners or veterinarians working in diagnostic laboratories. Data was gathered from papers published by the LVP-UFSM faculty and staff or retrieved from the laboratory archives. The most important neurological diseases of cattle included rabies, hepatic encephalopathy due to ingestion of Senecio spp., meningoencephalitis by bovine herpesvirus, cerebral babesiosis, poisoning by Solanum fastigiatum, malignant catarrhal fever, and polioencephalomalacia. Sheep were affected mostly by coenurosis, meningoencephalitis by Listeria monocytogenes, tetanus, encephalic or vertebral abscesses, and rabies. Goats were affected by meningoencephalitis by L. monocytogenes. Leukoencephalomalacia, trypanosomiasis by Trypanosoma evansi, and tetanus were important neurological diseases of horses.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2010

Surto de aflatoxicose em bezerros no Rio Grande do Sul

Felipe Pierezan; José C. Oliveira Filho; Priscila M. S Carmo; Ricardo B. Lucena; Daniel R. Rissi; Monique Togni; Claudio Santos Liborio Barros

An outbreak of chronic aflatoxicosis is reported in dairy calves. Forty 4-month-old male Holstein calves of approximately 100kg were kept in individual cages of 1.5 x 1.5m and were fed a ration constituted by alfalfa hay, broken corn and milk substitute. Six calves (15%) died after presenting a disease characterized by general unthriftiness, diarrhea, rough hair coats, abdominal pain, prolapsed rectum, grinding of teeth, and lying down and rolling. The clinical course, as observed by the owners, was 2-3 days; however many calves in this lot that did not die, remained underdeveloped. Three calves were necropsied. Necropsy findings included firm, light tan livers and marked hydrothorax, ascites and edema of the mesentery, mesocolon and of the mucosal folds of the abomasum. Main histopathological changes were restricted to the liver and consisted of fibrosis, moderate megalocytosis, biliary duct hyperplasia and veno-occlusive disease. The search for Senecio spp. contamination in the alfalfa hay resulted negative. The analysis by thin layer chromatography of the corn fed to calves revealed 5,136 ppb of aflatoxin B1. A diagnosis of aflatoxicosis was made based on the characteristic clinical signs and pathology, on the absence of Senecio spp. in the food and on the presence of high levels of aflatoxin in the corn fed to the calves.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2011

Defeitos congênitos em bovinos da Região Central do Rio Grande do Sul

Juliana Targino Silva Almeida Macêdo; Ricardo B. Lucena; Paula R. Giaretta; Glaucia D. Kommers; Rafael A. Fighera; Luiz F. Irigoyen; Claudio S.L. Barros

Cases of congenital defects (CDs) in cattle diagnosed at the Laboratory of Veterinary Pathology of the Federal University of Santa Maria from 1964 to 2010 were reviewed. During the studied period tissues collected from the necropsy of 7,132 cattle were examined and 31 calves (0.4%) with CDs were found. These CDs were classified into 34 different types and ascribed to the body system primarily affected. CDs were solitary (19 [61.3%]) or multiple (12 [38.7%]) and found with similar frequency in calves of both sexes. As several calves displayed multiple defects, a total of 53 CDs were computed. Out of the 53types of CDs diagnosed 15 (28.3%) affected the central nervous system (cranioschisis [4], cerebellar abiotrophy [2], spongy degeneration [2], hydrocephalus [2], meningocele [2], spina bifida [1], cerebellar hypoplasia [1], and hypomyelinogenesis [1]); nine (17.0%) affected the urogenital system (testicular agenesis [1], vaginal agenesia [1], penile hypoplasia [1], cloacal formation [1], freemartinism [1], ovarian vascular hamartoma [1], renal hypoplasia [1], renal cysts [1], and persistent urachus [1]); eight CDs (15,1%) were primary to the musculoskeletal system (arthrogryposis [4], scoliosis [1], plagiocephaly [1] schistosomus reflexus [1], and diprosopus [1]) and another eight (15,1%) were in the digestive system (palatoschisis [3], anal atresia [1], anorectal atresia [1], ano-colonic atresia [1], recto-vaginal fistula [1], and recto-urethral fistula [1]); in five instances (9.4%) the CD affected the cardiovascular system (persistent ductus arteriosus [2], persistence of foramen ovale [2], and ventricular septal defect [1]); four (7.5%) affected the lymphatic system and consisted of inherited hypoplasia or aplasia of lymphatic vessels and lymph nodes associated with lymphedema. Two cases (3.0%), of hypotrichosis were observed affecting the integument; one case (1.9%) of tracheal stenosis was found in the respiratory system and one case of goiter (1.9%) involved the endocrine system. The results of this survey inidicate that the majority o CDs in cattle in the central Rio Grande do Sul are sporadic; nevertheless their continued study is important for determining the etiology and control.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2011

Baccharis megapotamica var. weirii poisoning in water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis)

José C Oliveira-Filho; Priscila M. S Carmo; Ricardo B. Lucena; Felipe Pierezan; Claudio S.L. Barros

An outbreak of an acute disease in buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) caused by the ingestion of Baccharis megapotamica var. weirii occurred in the southern region of Brazil. Ten out of 50 buffalo died 24–48 hr after being introduced into a pasture containing abundant amounts of the plant. Factors influencing the ingestion of the plant and consequent toxicosis included hunger, stress caused by shipment, and unfamiliarity with the plant. Clinical signs included serous ocular discharge, incoordination, mild bloat, and muscle trembling. One buffalo was necropsied. Gross findings included dehydration, abundant liquid in the rumen, reddening of the mucosa of forestomachs, abomasum, and intestine, and edema of the wall of the rumen. The main histologic lesions were superficial to full thickness degeneration and necrosis of the stratified epithelium lining the forestomachs, necrosis of the intestinal mucosa, and widespread lymphoid necrosis. A calf (Bos taurus) was fed a single dose of 5g/kg/body weight of B. megapotamica var. weirii harvested from the same site where the buffalo died. Twenty hours after the administration of the plant this calf died with clinical signs and lesions similar to those observed in the naturally poisoned buffalo.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2013

Natural and experimental poisoning of goats with the pyrrolizidine alkaloid-producing plant Crotalaria retusa L.

Lisanka A. Maia; Ricardo B. Lucena; Verônica M.T. Nobre; A. F. M. Dantas; Steven M. Colegate; Franklin Riet-Correa

Crotalaria retusa L. (rattleweed), estimated to contain about 4.96% monocrotaline (MCT) in the seed, was associated with a natural poisoning outbreak in goats. The poisoning was experimentally reproduced by the administration of C. retusa seeds containing approximately 4.49% of MCT. Thus, 1 of 3 goats given a single dose of 5 g/kg bodyweight (bw) of seeds (248 mg MCT/kg bw) and 2 goats given a single dose of 347 mg MCT/kg bw showed acute clinical signs and were euthanized 10–11 days after dosing. Clinical signs and gross and histologic lesions were characteristic of acute centrilobular liver necrosis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ricardo B. Lucena's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Claudio S.L. Barros

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rafael A. Fighera

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Felipe Pierezan

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Glaucia D. Kommers

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Priscila M. S Carmo

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

José C Oliveira-Filho

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paula R. Giaretta

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bianca Tessele

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Camila Tochetto

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge