Sandra Jolly
University of Liège
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Featured researches published by Sandra Jolly.
Antiviral Research | 2012
Mutien-Marie Garigliany; Calixte Bayrou; Déborah Kleijnen; Dominique Cassart; Sandra Jolly; Annick Linden; Daniel Desmecht
In the summer-fall of 2011, a nonspecific febrile syndrome characterized by hyperthermia, drop in milk production and watery diarrhea was reported in adult dairy cows from a series of farms located in North-West Europe. Further, in November 2011, an enzootic outbreak of abortion, stillbirth and birth at term of lambs, kids and calves with neurologic signs and/or head, spine or limb malformations emerged throughout several European countries. Both syndromes were associated with the presence in the blood (adults) or in the central nervous system (newborns) of the genome of a new Shamonda-Sathuperi reassortant orthobunyavirus provisionally named Schmallenberg virus after the place where the first positive samples were collected. The clinical, pathological, virological and epidemiological facts that were made publicly available during the first 6 months after the emergence are presented here. Current knowledge of the epidemiology of the phylogenetically closest relatives of the newcomer (Shamonda, Sathuperi, Aino and Akabane viruses) is not exhaustive enough to predict whether the current outbreak of Schmallenberg virus is the prelude to endemicity or to a 2 years long outbreak before the infection burns out when serologically naïve animals are no longer available. In the future, cyclic epizootic reemergences are a possibility too, either synchronized with a global decrease of herd immunity or due to antigenic variants escaping the immunity acquired against their predecessors. The latter hypothesis seems unlikely because of the wide array of biologic constraints acting on the genome of viruses whose life cycle requires transmission by a vector, which represses genetic drift. The remarkable stability of the Shamonda virus genome over the last forty years is reassuring in this regard.
Veterinary Record | 2008
Daniel Desmecht; Raphaël Vanden Bergh; Arnaud Sartelet; M. Leclerc; C. Mignot; F. Misse; C. Sudraud; S. Berthemin; Sandra Jolly; Bénédicte Mousset; Annick Linden; Freddy Coignoul; Dominique Cassart
DURING the winter 2007/08, an outbreak of unprecedented development lesions of the central nervous system was detected in newborn or stillborn calves and lambs among the routine submissions to the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Liege, Belgium, for postmortem examination. The congenital
Journal of Small Animal Practice | 2012
Angélique Zicola; Sandra Jolly; Elisabeth Mathijs; Dominique Ziant; Nicola Decaro; V. Mari; Etienne Thiry
Infection with pantropic canine coronavirus was detected during outbreaks in France and Belgium. This was concurrent in most cases with canine parvovirus 2c. One outbreak was a deadly acute systemic disease with a single pantropic canine coronavirus infection. This is the first report of a fatality associated with pantropic canine coronavirus alone outside Italy.
Journal of Anatomy | 1998
Annick Gabriel; Sandra Jolly; Johann Detilleux; Cécile Dessy-Doizé; Bernard Collin; Jean-Yves Reginster
Navicular bones from the 4 limbs of 95 horses, classified in 9 categories, were studied. The anatomical bases were established for the morphometry of the navicular bone and its variations according to the category of horse, after corrections were made for front or rear limb, sex, weight, size and age. In ponies, navicular bone measurements were smallest for light ponies and regularly increased with body size, but in horses, navicular bone dimensions were smallest for the athletic halfbred, intermediate for draft horse, thoroughbreds and sedentary halfbreds and largest for heavy halfbreds. The athletic halfbred thus showed reduced bone dimensions when compared with other horse types. Navicular bones from 61 horses were studied histomorphometrically. Light horses and ponies possessed larger amounts of cancellous bone and less cortical bone. Draft horses and heavy ponies showed marked thickening of cortical bone with minimum intracortical porosity, and a decrease in marrow spaces associated with more trabecular bone. Two distinct zones were observed for the flexor surface cortex: an external zone composed mainly of poorly remodelled lamellar bone, disposed in a distoproximal oblique direction, and an internal zone composed mainly of secondary bone, with a lateromedial direction for haversian canals. Flexor cortex external zone tended to be smaller for heavy ponies than for the light ponies. It was the opposite for horses, with the largest amount of external zone registered for draft horses. In athletic horses, we observed an increase in the amount of cortical bone at the expense of cancellous bone which could be the result of reduced resorption and increased formation at the corticoendosteal junction. Cancellous bone was reduced for the athletic horses but the number of trabeculae and their specific surfaces were larger. Increased bone formation and reduced resorption could also account for these differences.
Veterinary Record | 2013
Calixte Bayrou; Mutien-Marie Garigliany; Dominique Cassart; Sandra Jolly; Daniel Desmecht
IN Belgium, the end of 2011 and beginning of 2012 were characterised by numerous reports of births at term of calves with neurological signs or malformations of the head, spine or limbs that were subsequently assigned to the emerging Schmallenberg virus (SBV) (Garigliany and others 2012a). Further, the large-scale cross-sectional serological surveys conducted in cattle during spring 2012 concluded that almost all Belgian cattle had already been in contact with the virus (Garigliany and others 2012b, Meroc and others 2013). As the immunity raised by the cow against close phylogenetic …
Veterinary Research Communications | 1999
Annick Gabriel; Johann Detilleux; Sandra Jolly; Jean-Yves Reginster; Bernard Collin; Cécile Dessy
Navicular bones from the four limbs of 95 horses, classified in 9 categories, were studied. The effects of age on navicular bone morphometry and histomorphometry were estimated, after adjustment of the data to even out the effects of front and rear limbs, morphometrical type, sex, weight, and size.All the external measurements of the navicular bone decreased significantly with increasing age. From the histomorphometrical data, cortical bone volume decreased with age in most horses, whereas cancellous bone volume and, in particular, the marrow spaces increased. The increase in the cancellous bone volume could have resulted from tunnelling of the internal part of the cortex, which converted it progressively into a porous trabecular-like structure. Trabecular bone volume also decreased with age and the trabecular lattice changed dramatically to become disconnected in aged horses. These observations corresponded closely to those reported for ageing of the skeletal system in humans.However, in sporting horses, the navicular cortical bone volume increased with age and the cancellous bone volume decreased. Exercise appeared to have decreased bone resorption and increased bone formation at the endocortical junction. The cancellous bone architecture was also improved, in that the trabecular lattice and trabecular bone volume remained unchanged in aged sporting horses. Our findings confirmed that exercise may be good practice to prevent age-related bone loss.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology C-toxicology & Pharmacology | 2003
Sandra Jolly; Daniel Desmecht
Theoretically, the overall effect of histamine on respiratory smooth muscle is the result of a subtle balance of contraction and relaxation. The aim of the study was to identify histamine type 2 (H2) and 3 (H3) receptor-dependent relaxing mechanisms in the contractile elements of the bovine tracheobronchial tree. In bronchial preparations, histamine induced very weak contractions, which were not exacerbated with the H2-antagonist cimetidine. Moreover, precontracted bronchial rings never relaxed in response to cumulative doses of histamine or amthamine (H2-agonist). In intact tracheal preparations, histamine induced strong contractions that were exacerbated by cimetidine (E(max): +17.2+/-6.6%) but not by thioperamide (H3-antagonist). Precontracted tracheal bundles did not relax in response to cumulative doses of the H3-agonist R-alpha-methylhistamine. The tracheal contractile response was higher in denuded compared to intact preparations (11.0+/-1.2 vs. 6.0+/-1.7 g). Cimetidine effect was dramatically potentiated in denuded tracheal strips (+40.0+/-11.7%). It is concluded that the weak response of bovine bronchi to histamine is due to a relative scarcity of H1 receptors on bronchial smooth muscle rather than to H2- or H3-dependent relaxation. In the bovine trachea, the smooth muscle possesses relaxing H2 but no H3 receptors. The epithelium exercises a relaxation, which is independent from H2 and H3 receptors.
BMC Veterinary Research | 2016
Mutien-Marie Garigliany; Gautier Gilliaux; Sandra Jolly; Tomas Casanova; Calixte Bayrou; Kris Gommeren; Thomas Fett; Axel Mauroy; Etienne Levy; Dominique Cassart; Dominique Peeters; Luc Poncelet; Daniel Desmecht
BackgroundPerinatal infections with feline panleukopenia virus (FPV) have long been known to be associated with cerebellar hypoplasia in kittens due to productive infection of dividing neuroblasts. FPV, like other parvoviruses, requires dividing cells to replicate which explains the usual tropism of the virus for the digestive tract, lymphoid tissues and bone marrow in older animals.ResultsIn this study, the necropsy and histopathological analyses of a series of 28 cats which died from parvovirus infection in 2013 were performed. Infections were confirmed by real time PCR and immunohistochemistry in several organs. Strikingly, while none of these cats showed cerebellar atrophy or cerebellar positive immunostaining, some of them, including one adult, showed a bright positive immunostaining for viral antigens in cerebral neurons (diencephalon). Furthermore, infected neurons were negative by immunostaining for p27Kip1, a cell cycle regulatory protein, while neighboring, uninfected, neurons were positive, suggesting a possible re-entry of infected neurons into the mitotic cycle. Next-Generation Sequencing and PCR analyses showed that the virus infecting cat brains was FPV and presented a unique substitution in NS1 protein sequence. Given the role played by this protein in the control of cell cycle and apoptosis in other parvoviral species, it is tempting to hypothesize that a cause-to-effect between this NS1 mutation and the capacity of this FPV strain to infect neurons in adult cats might exist.ConclusionsThis study provides the first evidence of infection of cerebral neurons by feline panleukopenia virus in cats, including an adult. A possible re-entry into the cell cycle by infected neurons has been observed. A mutation in the NS1 protein sequence of the FPV strain involved could be related to its unusual cellular tropism. Further research is needed to clarify this point.
Veterinary Record | 2013
Mutien-Marie Garigliany; Calixte Bayrou; Dominique Cassart; Sandra Jolly; Daniel Desmecht
FIELD veterinarians refer approximately 2200 dead animals per year for postmortem examination to the University of Lieges Faculty of Veterinary Medicine. In March 2013, a seven-year-old Belgian blue cow was referred with a history of depression, anorexia, weight loss and purulent metritis that did not respond to standard antibiotic therapies. Postmortem examination revealed severe emaciation (cachexia), chronic …
Veterinary Record | 2016
Mutien-Marie Garigliany; Sandra Jolly; Marc Dive; Calixte Bayrou; S. Berthemin; P. Robin; R. Godenir; J. Petry; S. Dahout; Dominique Cassart; Etienne Thiry; Daniel Desmecht; Claude Saegerman
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of several risk/protective factors and predictors on the prevalence of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) and feline leukaemia virus (FeLV) infections in 302 stray cats captured during a trap-neuter-release programme in a mixed urban-rural area from Belgium, from 2010 to 2012. The impact of selective removal of FIV-positive cats on the apparent prevalence in the remaining population over this three-year period was also assessed. The seroprevalences over three years were 18.8 per cent for FIV and 0.7 per cent for FeLV. For FIV, the seroprevalence decreased significantly from the first year of the programme (2010; 30.5 per cent) to the last (2012; 13.1 per cent). Sex (male) and age (adult and old cats) were risk factors, while the year of sampling (years 2011 and 2012) was a protective factor. Age, sex and location were the most relevant predictors of FIV status. The data presented in this study revealed a very high FIV seroprevalence in Belgian stray cats, while FeLV was almost absent. The selective removal of positive cats had a drastic effect on the FIV seroprevalence in the remaining cat population.