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Dive into the research topics where Tina C. Crosby is active.

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Featured researches published by Tina C. Crosby.


Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2014

Reproductive toxicity in rats with crystal nephropathy following high doses of oral melamine or cyanuric acid.

Cynthia B. Stine; Renate Reimschuessel; Zachary Keltner; Cristina B. Nochetto; T.N. Black; Nicholas Olejnik; Michael Scott; Omari Bandele; Sarah M. Nemser; Andriy Tkachenko; Eric Evans; Tina C. Crosby; Olgica Ceric; Martine Ferguson; Betsy Jean Yakes; Robert L. Sprando

The industrial chemical melamine was used in 2007 and 2008 to raise the apparent protein content in pet feed and watered down milk, respectively. Because humans may be exposed to melamine via several different routes into the human diet as well as deliberate contamination, this study was designed to characterize the effect of high dose melamine or cyanuric acid oral exposure on the pregnant animal and developing fetus, including placental transfer. Clear rectangular crystals formed following a single triazine exposure which is a different morphology from the golden spherulites caused by combined exposure or the calculi formed when melamine combines with endogenous uric acid. Crystal nephropathy, regardless of cause, induces renal failure which in turn has reproductive sequelae. Specifically, melamine alone-treated dams had increased numbers of early and late fetal deaths compared to controls or cyanuric acid-treated dams. As melamine was found in the amniotic fluid, this study confirms transfer of melamine from mammalian mother to fetus and our study provides evidence that cyanuric acid also appears in the amniotic fluid if mothers are exposed to high doses.


Journal of Aquatic Animal Health | 2006

Effects of Tricaine Methanesulfonate, Hypno, Metomidate, Quinaldine, and Salt on Plasma Cortisol Levels following Acute Stress in Threespot Gourami Trichogaster trichopterus

Tina C. Crosby; Jeffrey E. Hill; Craig A. Watson; Roy P. E. Yanong; Richard J. Strange

Abstract Blood plasma cortisol concentration is an indicator of stress in fish, and anesthetics may serve to ameliorate stress and reduce the cortisol response. Previous studies have concentrated on cold- and warmwater species; little information exists for tropical fishes. Mortalities are increased after handling stress of threespot gourami Trichogaster trichopterus (Osphronemidae), a commonly cultured tropical ornamental fish. Plasma cortisol levels were evaluated in threespot gourami after a handling stressor and treatment with one of four anesthetics—tricaine methanesulfonate (TMS; 60 mg/L), metomidate (0.8 mg/L), quinaldine (5 mg/L), and Hypno (0.14 mg/L)—or salt (NaCl; 3 g/L). Fish in all anesthetic treatments had significantly lower cortisol levels than either salt-treated fish or the untreated controls. Therefore, the use of such anesthetics should be beneficial in reducing handling stress. Based on our data, further studies refining the use of anesthetics, particularly metomidate and quinaldine, ...


Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2012

Timing and route of exposure affects crystal formation in melamine and cyanuric exposed male and female rats: gavage vs. feeding.

Robert L. Sprando; Renate Reimschuessel; Cynthia B. Stine; T.N. Black; Nicholas Olejnik; Michael Scott; Zachary Keltner; Omari Bandele; Martine Ferguson; Sarah M. Nemser; Andriy Tkachenko; Eric Evans; Tina C. Crosby; Kellie A. Woodling; Lucie Loukotková; Gonçalo Gamboa da Costa

Effects of the dosing matrix and timing on the onset of renal crystal formation were evaluated in male and non-pregnant female rats (Fisher 344) exposed to both melamine (MEL) and cyanuric acid (CYA) for 28 days. Rats were fed ground feed containing 60 ppm MEL and 60 ppm CYA, (5 mg/kg bw/day equivalent), or exposed via oral gavage to carboxymethylcellulose containing 5 mg/kg bw MEL followed by 5 mg/kg bw CYA either consecutively (<1 min apart) or delayed 45 min after MEL. Staggered gavage exposure to MEL/CYA caused extensive renal crystal formation as compared to when the two compounds were administered consecutively or in feed. Treatment related effects included reduced weight gain, feed consumption, and testicular weight and increased kidney weight, water consumption and urine output. Animals from the staggered MEL/CYA gavage exposure group became ill and were removed after 9 days of exposure. Approximately 1 week after the initiation of exposure microscopic urinalysis revealed MEL/CYA crystals in both groups of gavaged animals but not in the MEL/CYA feed treatment groups. Urinary crystals were smaller (10 μm) in animals consecutively gavaged. In contrast the urinary crystals were larger (20-40 μm) and frequently clumped in the animals in the staggered gavage group.


Diseases of Aquatic Organisms | 2012

Quality control ranges for testing broth microdilution susceptibility of Flavobacterium columnare and F. psychrophilum to nine antimicrobials

Charles M. Gieseker; Tamara D. Mayer; Tina C. Crosby; J Carson; Inger Dalsgaard; Ahmed M. Darwish; Patricia S. Gaunt; Dana X. Gao; Hui-Min Hsu; Tsang L. Lin; J. Lindsay Oaks; Melissa Pyecroft; Charlene Teitzel; Temdoung Somsiri; Ching C. Wu

A multi-laboratory broth microdilution method trial was performed to standardize the specialized test conditions required for the fish pathogens Flavobacterium columnare and F. psychrophilum. Nine laboratories tested the quality control (QC) strains Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 and Aeromonas salmonicida subsp. salmonicida ATCC 33658 against 10 antimicrobials (ampicillin, enrofloxacin, erythromycin, florfenicol, flumequine, gentamicin, ormetoprim/sulfadimethoxine, oxolinic acid, oxytetracycline, and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole) in diluted (4 g l-1) cation-adjusted Mueller-Hinton broth incubated at 28 and 18°C for 44-48 and 92-96 h, respectively. QC ranges were set for 9 of the 10 antimicrobials. Most of the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) distributions (16 of 18, 9 drugs at both temperatures) for A. salmonicida ATCC 33658 were centered on a single median MIC ± 1 two-fold drug dilution resulting in a QC range that spanned 3 dilutions. More of the E. coli ATCC 25922 MIC distributions (7 of 16) were centered between 2 MIC dilutions requiring a QC range that spanned 4 dilutions. A QC range could not be determined for E. coli ATCC 25922 against 2 antimicrobials at the low temperature. These data and their associated QC ranges have been approved by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI), and will be included in the next edition of the CLSI M49-A Guideline. This method represents the first standardized reference method for testing fish pathogenic Flavobacterium spp.


North American Journal of Aquaculture | 2010

Plasma Cortisol, Blood Glucose, and Marketability of Koi Transported with Metomidate Hydrochloride

Tina C. Crosby; B. Denise Petty; Heather J. Hamlin; Louis J. Guillette; Jeffrey E. Hill; Kathleen H. Hartman; Roy P. E. Yanong

Abstract The transportation of fish is stressful and may negatively affect their health, appearance, and marketability (i.e., their appearance, behavior, and activity level). The objective of this study was to determine whether sedation with metomidate hydrochloride during transportation would inhibit elevation of the plasma cortisol and blood glucose levels of koi, a strain of common carp Cyprinus carpio, and improve their marketability relative to that of transported control fish. The metomidate concentrations tested were 0 (control), 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, and 4.0 mg/L. The fish were transported for approximately 24 h via truck and domestic airline under typical shipping conditions. Blood was sampled at 0, 2, 6, and 12 h posttransportation, and appearance and behavior were observed at 0, 1, 4, 8, and 12 h and 7 d posttransportation. Immediately after transport, the plasma cortisol levels of koi in metomidate concentrations of 3.0 and 4.0 mg/L were significantly lower than those of the controls, but no differen...


Journal of Aquatic Animal Health | 2016

Development of Similar Broth Microdilution Methods to Determine the Antimicrobial Susceptibility of Flavobacterium columnare and F. psychrophilum

Charles M. Gieseker; Tina C. Crosby; Tamara D. Mayer; Sonya M. Bodeis; Cynthia B. Stine

Flavobacterium columnare and F. psychrophilum are major fish pathogens that cause diseases that may require antimicrobial therapy. Choice of appropriate treatment is dependent upon determining the antimicrobial susceptibility of isolates. Therefore we optimized methods for broth microdilution testing of F. columnare and F. psychrophilum to facilitate standardizing an antimicrobial susceptibility test. We developed adaptations to make reproducible broth inoculums and confirmed the proper incubation time and media composition. We tested the stability of potential quality-control bacteria and compared test results between different operators. Log phase occurred at 48 h for F. columnare and 72-96 h for F. psychrophilum, confirming the test should be incubated at 28°C for approximately 48 h and at 18°C for approximately 96 h, respectively. The most consistent susceptibility results were achieved with plain, 4-g/L, dilute Mueller-Hinton broth supplemented with dilute calcium and magnesium. Supplementing the broth with horse serum did not improve growth. The quality-control strains, Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 and Aeromonas salmonicida subsp. salmonicida ATCC 33658, yielded stable minimal inhibitory concentrations (MIC) against all seven antimicrobials tested after 30 passes at 28°C and 15 passes at 18°C. In comparison tests, most MICs of the isolates agreed 100% within one drug dilution for ampicillin, florfenicol, and oxytetracycline. The agreement was lower with the ormetoprim-sulfdimethoxine combination, but there was at least 75% agreement for all but one isolate. These experiments have provided methods to help standardize antimicrobial susceptibility testing of these nutritionally fastidious aquatic bacteria. Received June 24, 2015; accepted October 2, 2015.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2018

Application and evaluation of a high-resolution mass spectrometry screening method for veterinary drug residues in incurred fish and imported aquaculture samples

Sherri B. Turnipseed; Joseph M. Storey; I-Lin Wu; Charles M. Gieseker; Nicholas R. Hasbrouck; Tina C. Crosby; Wendy C. Andersen; Shanae Lanier; Christine R. Casey; Robert Burger; Mark R. Madson

AbstractThe ability to detect chemical contaminants, including veterinary drug residues in animal products such as fish, is an important example of food safety analysis. In this paper, a liquid chromatography high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) screening method using a quadrupole-Orbitrap instrument was applied to the analysis of veterinary drug residues in incurred tissues from aquacultured channel catfish, rainbow trout, and Atlantic salmon and imported aquacultured products including European eel, yellow croaker, and tilapia. Compared to traditional MS methods, the use of HRMS with nontargeted data acquisition and exact mass measurement capability greatly increased the scope of compounds that could be monitored simultaneously. The fish samples were prepared for analysis using a simple efficient procedure that consisted of an acidic acetonitrile extraction followed by solid phase extraction cleanup. Two different HRMS acquisition programs were used to analyze the fish extracts. This method detected and identified veterinary drugs including quinolones, fluoroquinolones, avermectins, dyes, and aminopenicillins at residue levels in fish that had been dosed with those compounds. A metabolite of amoxicillin, amoxicillin diketone, was also found at high levels in catfish, trout, and salmon. The method was also used to characterize drug residues in imported fish. In addition to confirming findings of fluoroquinolone and sulfonamide residues that were found by traditional targeted MS methods, several new compounds including 2-amino mebendazole in eel and ofloxacin in croaker were detected and identified. Graphical AbstractAquacultured samples are analyzed with a high-resolution mass spectrometry screening method to detect and identify unusual veterinary drug residues including ofloxacin in an imported fish.


Archive | 2007

On-Farm Transport of Ornamental Fish 1

Tina C. Crosby; Jeffrey E. Hill; Carlos V. Martinez; Craig A. Watson; Deborah B. Pouder


Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2014

Use of urinary renal biomarkers to evaluate the nephrotoxic effects of melamine or cyanuric acid in non-pregnant and pregnant rats

Omari Bandele; Cynthia B. Stine; Martine Ferguson; T.N. Black; Nicholas Olejnik; Zachary Keltner; Eric Evans; Tina C. Crosby; Renate Reimschuessel; Robert L. Sprando


Journal of Aquatic Animal Health | 2012

Effects of Metomidate Hydrochloride Sedation on Blood Glucose and Marketability of Transported Threespot Gourami Trichogaster trichopterus

Tina C. Crosby; Jeffrey E. Hill; Kathleen H. Hartman; Roy P. E. Yanong

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Cynthia B. Stine

Center for Veterinary Medicine

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Charles M. Gieseker

Food and Drug Administration

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Eric Evans

Food and Drug Administration

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Martine Ferguson

Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition

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Nicholas Olejnik

Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition

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Omari Bandele

Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition

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Renate Reimschuessel

Food and Drug Administration

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Robert L. Sprando

Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition

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