362 research outputs found
Feline sino-nasal and sino-orbital aspergillosis
Feline sino-nasal and sino-orbital aspergillosis. This thesis characterizes upper respiratory tract aspergillosis (URTA) in domestic cats, an emerging mycosis caused by fungi from Genus Aspergillus. Affected cats were 1.5 to13 years old (median 5 y). Brachycephalic purebred cats were over-represented. Sino-orbital aspergillosis (SOA) was more common than sino-nasal aspergillosis (SNA). Fungal pathogens were cultured readily. Aspergillus fumigatus was the most common cause of SNA. In all cases of SOA, the fungal pathogen was an uncharacterised species within the Aspergillus viridinutans complex in Aspergillus section Fumigati. This pathogen, also isolated from a dog and a human with aspergillosis, was subsequently identified as a novel species, A. felis (neosartorya-morph), using a polyphasic taxonomic approach including comparative sequence analysis of the ITS, partial β-tubulin and calmodulin genes. A. felis is heterothallic with a functioning reproductive cycle, as confirmed by mating-type analysis, teleomorph induction and ascospore germination. It can be distinguished from A. viridinutans by growth at 45 °C and from A. fumigatus by lack of growth at 50 °C. Computed tomography was used to investigate pathogenesis of URTA. Findings support that the nasal cavity is the portal of entry for fungal spores in feline URTA and that extension to involve the orbit is via direct naso-orbital communication from bone lysis. Sera from cats with URTA, and two control groups were tested to detect Aspergillus-specific antibodies using an agar-gel double immunodiffusion (AGID) assay and an indirect IgG ELISA. The sensitivity (SE) of the AGID was 43% and specificity (SP) was 100%. At a cut-off value of 6 ELISA Units/mL the SE of the IgG ELISA was 95.2% and SP was 92 - 92.9%. Aspergillus-specific antibodies against A. fumigatus and four cryptic species (A. felis, A. thermomutatus, A. lentulus, A. udagawae) were detected. Detection of Aspergillus-specific antibodies by IgG ELISA has high SE and SP for diagnosis of feline URTA
Evolutionary relationships between Rhynchosporium lolii sp. nov. and other Rhynchosporium species on grass.
Copyright: 2013 King et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are creditedThe fungal genus Rhynchosporium (causative agent of leaf blotch) contains several host-specialised species, including R. commune (colonising barley and brome-grass), R. agropyri (couch-grass), R. secalis (rye and triticale) and the more distantly related R. orthosporum (cocksfoot). This study used molecular fingerprinting, multilocus DNA sequence data, conidial morphology, host range tests and scanning electron microscopy to investigate the relationship between Rhynchosporium species on ryegrasses, both economically important forage grasses and common wild grasses in many cereal growing areas, and other plant species. Two different types of Rhynchosporium were found on ryegrasses in the UK. Firstly, there were isolates of R. commune that were pathogenic to both barley and Italian ryegrass. Secondly, there were isolates of a new species, here named R. lolii, that were pathogenic only to ryegrass species. R. lolii was most closely related to R. orthosporum, but exhibited clear molecular, morphological and host range differences. The species was estimated to have diverged from R. orthosporum ca. 5735 years before the present. The colonisation strategy of all of the different Rhynchosporium species involved extensive hyphal growth in the sub-cuticular regions of the leaves. Finally, new species-specific PCR diagnostic tests were developed that could distinguish between these five closely related Rhynchosporium species.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
Stab Injury to the Preauricular Region With Laceration of the External Carotid Artery Without Involvement of the Facial Nerve: a Case Report
BACKGROUND:
Open injuries to the face involving the external carotid artery are uncommon. These injuries are normally associated with laceration of the facial nerve because this nerve is more superficial than the external carotid artery. Hence, external carotid artery lesions are usually associated with facial nerve dysfunction. We present an unusual case report in which the patient had an injury to this artery with no facial nerve compromise.
CASE PRESENTATION:
A 25-year-old Portuguese man sustained a stab wound injury to his right preauricular region with a broken glass. Immediate profuse bleeding ensued. Provisory tamponade of the wound was achieved at the place of aggression by two off-duty doctors. He was initially transferred to a district hospital, where a large arterial bleeding was observed and a temporary compressive dressing was applied. Subsequently, the patient was transferred to a tertiary hospital. At admission in the emergency room, he presented a pulsating lesion in the right preauricular region and slight weakness in the territory of the inferior buccal branch of the facial nerve. The physical examination suggested an arterial lesion superficial to the facial nerve. However, in the operating theater, a section of the posterior and lateral flanks of the external carotid artery inside the parotid gland was identified. No lesion of the facial nerve was observed, and the external carotid artery was repaired. To better understand the anatomical rationale of this uncommon clinical case, we dissected the preauricular region of six cadavers previously injected with colored latex solutions in the vascular system. A small triangular space between the two main branches of division of the facial nerve in which the external carotid artery was not covered by the facial nerve was observed bilaterally in all cases.
CONCLUSIONS:
This clinical case illustrates that, in a preauricular wound, the external carotid artery can be injured without facial nerve damage. However, no similar description was found in the reviewed literature, which suggests that this must be a very rare occurrence. According to the dissection study performed, this is due to the existence of a triangular space between the cervicofacial and temporofacial nerve trunks in which the external carotid artery is not covered by the facial nerve or its branches.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Effects of Salt Secretion on Psychrometric Determinations of Water Potential of Cotton Leaves
Water Potential Increase in Sliced Leaf Tissue as a Cause of Error in Vapor Phase Determinations of Water Potential
Whose writing is it anyway? Issues of control in the teaching of writing
This is a postprint of an article whose final and definitive form has been published in the Cambridge Journal of Education© 2006 Copyright University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education; Cambridge Journal of Education is available online at http://www.informaworld.comIn the UK, teachers have moved from a process approach to the teaching of writing to a more didactic and objectives led programme. This has given rise to concerns about the suppression of creativity and enjoyment. Writing is a convention bound activity where spelling, punctuation and expectations about different text types imply a right and wrong way of writing. On the other hand, the best writers are able to use and subvert conventions in creative and individual ways. Teachers of young writers are faced with the difficulty of teaching the correct conventions at the same time as encouraging individual responses. This paper considers evidence from a small-scale study that may shed some light on how teachers cope with these potentially opposing demands. Evidence points to teachers giving very clear guidance to pupils about what is expected of them and carefully scaffolding pupils' learning. However, scaffolding implies a stage where control is handed over to the learners and in this study there was little evidence of these teachers handing over the control. It is argued that for children to learn the conventions at the same time as developing confidence to use these conventions in individual and creative ways, this handover of control is essential
Distinct lineages of feline parvovirus associated with epizootic outbreaks in Australia, New Zealand and the United Arab Emirates
Feline panleukopenia (FPL), a frequently fatal disease of cats, is caused by feline parvovirus (FPV) or canine parvovirus (CPV). We investigated simultaneous outbreaks of FPL between 2014 and 2018 in Australia, New Zealand and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) where FPL outbreaks had not been reported for several decades. Case data from 989 cats and clinical samples from additional 113 cats were obtained to determine the cause of the outbreaks and epidemiological factors involved. Most cats with FPL were shelter-housed, 9 to 10 weeks old at diagnosis, unvaccinated, had not completed a primary vaccination series or had received vaccinations noncompliant with current guidelines. Analysis of parvoviral VP2 sequence data confirmed that all FPL cases were caused by FPV and not CPV. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that each of these outbreaks was caused by a distinct FPV, with two virus lineages present in eastern Australia and virus movement between different geographical locations. Viruses from the UAE outbreak formed a lineage of unknown origin. FPV vaccine virus was detected in the New Zealand cases, highlighting the difficulty of distinguishing the co-incidental shedding of vaccine virus in vaccinated cats. Inadequate vaccination coverage in shelter-housed cats was a common factor in all outbreaks, likely precipitating the multiple re-emergence of infection events
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