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1Department of Veterinary Biosciences, PO Box 66, 00014 University of Helsinki, Finland.
The aim of this study was to estimate the prevalence of feline intestinal parasites in Finland and to determine the possible risk factors for infection. Altogether 411 feline fecal samples were analyzed with a flotation method to reveal helminth eggs and protozoan oocysts. Of the samples, 402 were also screened for Giardia species antigens with a commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kit. The cat owners completed a questionnaire. Toxocara cati prevalence was 5.4% and Toxascaris leonina 0.2%. Taenia species eggs were found in 1.5% of the samples and Isospora felis in 0.7%, whilst 3.2% of the samples tested positive for Giardia species antigen. Risk factors for Toxocara/Toxascaris species infection included being a non-pedigree cat, having access to the outdoors, living outside of the cities and receiving home-made food. Pedigree cats were at greater risk of contracting Giardia duodenalis. The majority of the cat owners (62.4%) treated their cat with anthelmintics 2-4 times per year.
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Department of Veterinary Biosciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Helsinki, P.O. Box 66, FI-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland.
The meat of wild boar (Sus scrofa L.) can be a source of human infections with zoonotic parasites Toxoplasma gondii and Trichinella spp. We screened 197 wild boar sera collected at slaughter from 25 Finnish farms in 2007-2008 for serological evidence of infections with these parasites. Using a commercial direct agglutination test at a serum dilution of 1:40, T. gondii-specific IgG antibodies were detected in 65 (33.0%) samples, on 14 (56.0%) farms. Females, animals older than 24 months, animals of small herds, and animals originating from south-western parts of Finland were more often T. gondii-seropositive than were males, younger animals, animals of larger herds, and animals originating from the north and east, respectively. Four (2.0%) of the sera, originating from three (12.0%) farms, tested Trichinella-seropositive with an in-house ELISA and a conservative cut-off for seropositivity. One farm had both T. gondii- and Trichinella-seropositive animals. Taken together, an infection source had been present on 16 (64.0%) farms, and 69 (35.0%) of the 197 farmed wild boars intended for human consumption had specific serological evidence of exposure to a zoonotic parasite.
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Department of Veterinary Disease Biology, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Stigbøjlen 4 DK-1870, Frederiksberg C, Denmark.
In Staphylococcus aureus, ClpP proteases were previously shown to be essential for virulence and stress tolerance in strains derived from NCTC8325. Because these strains exhibit a severely reduced activity of the alternative sigma factor, SigB, we here reassessed the role of ClpP in SigB-proficient clinical strains. To this end, clpP was deleted in strains COL, Newman, and SA564, and the strains were characterized phenotypically. The proteomic changes accomplished by the clpP deletion in the different strains were analyzed using the 2-D DIGE technique. The proteomic analyses revealed mostly conserved changes in the protein profiles of the ClpP-deficient strains. Among the strain-specific changes were the up-regulation of prophage proteins that coincided with an increased spontaneous release of prophages and the relatively poorer growth of the clpP mutants in some strain backgrounds. Interestingly, the effect of ClpP on the expression of selected virulence genes was strain-dependent despite the fact that the expression of the global virulence regulators RNAIII, mgrA, sarZ, sarR, and arlRS was similarly changed in all clpP mutants. ClpP affected the expression of sarS in a strain-dependent manner, and we propose that the differential expression of sarS is central to the strain-dependent effect of ClpP on the expression of virulence genes.
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Department of Medicine/Invärtes Medicin, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland. teppo.heinola@gmail.com
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University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
We report an unusual case of human babesiosis in Finland in a 53-year-old man with no history of splenectomy. He had a rudimentary spleen, coexisting Lyme borreliosis, exceptional dark streaks on his extremities, and subsequent disseminated aspergillosis. He was infected with Babesia divergens, which usually causes bovine babesiosis in Finland.
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Department of Veterinary Biosciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, P.O. Box 66, FI-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland.
A nationwide seroepidemiological study was conducted to estimate the prevalence of Toxoplasma gondii in selected wild and domestic ruminants in Finland. Serum samples from 1367 game cervids collected during the hunting season in 2008-2009 and 1940 sheep sera collected in 2008 were screened with a commercial direct agglutination test at a serum dilution of 1:40. T. gondii-specific IgG antibodies were detected in 116 (9.6%) of 1215 moose (European elk, Alces alces), 36 (26.7%) of 135 white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), 3 (17.6%) of 17 roe deer (Capreolus capreolus), and 477 (24.6%) of 1940 domestic sheep. Seropositive sheep were found in 74 (76.3%) of the 97 flocks examined. The odds of seropositivity in the adult moose was 2.9 times higher than the odds in calves; in white-tailed deer, the odds ratio was 3.2. The male moose had a significantly lower seroprevalence than the female, whereas the seroprevalence in the male white-tailed deer was higher than in the female; the odds ratios were 0.6 and 2.5, respectively. A clear geographical gradient in the seroprevalence was revealed in moose and sheep. The seroprevalences were lowest (1.6 and 8.6%, respectively) in the north and highest (24.6 and 36.4%, respectively) in the south-western regions, and ranged between these values in the other regions. In fact, the seroprevalence in moose from the south-west was not significantly different from the prevalence in white-tailed deer from the same area. Thus, the Finnish wild cervids and sheep are commonly exposed to T. gondii, especially in the southern part of the country.
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Although human infections have not been reported in Finland for several decades, and Trichinella infection in pork has become practically extinct in the last decade, sylvatic Trichinella spp. infection is still highly prevalent in Finland. Muscle digestion of 2,483 carnivorous wild animals from 9 host species during 1999-2005 showed 617 positive animals (24.8%). Molecular identification from 328 larval isolates revealed 4 different endemic Trichinella species, i.e., T. nativa, T. spiralis, T. britovi, and T. pseudospiralis. Seven percent of the infected animals carried mixed infections. Trichinella nativa was the most common species (74%), but T. spiralis was identified in 12%, T. britovi in 6%, and T. pseudospiralis in 1% of the animals. Host species showed different sample prevalences and Trichinella species distributions. Geographical distribution also varied, with the southern part of the country having significantly higher percentages than the northern part. Infection density was dependent on both the infecting Trichinella species and the host species. Trichinella spiralis was discovered in areas with no known domestic infection cases, indicating that it can also exist in the sylvatic cycle. Raccoon dogs and red foxes are the most important reservoir animals for T. spiralis, as well as for the sylvatic Trichinella species in Finland.
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Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland.
OBJECTIVE:To analyze immunohistochemically the localization of the VEGF receptors in experimental intervertebral disc degeneration tissues in a pig model.MATERIALS AND METHODS:In six domestic pigs, the cranial bony endplate of the L4 vertebra were perforated into the nucleus pulposus. Three months postoperatively, the animals were sacrificed and the experimental and control vertebrae, complete with intervertebral discs, were excised and subjected for immunohistochemical staining of vascular endothelial growth factor receptors (VEGFR) along with VEGF - A,-C,-D and blood and lymphatic vessel markers vWF and LYVE-1.RESULTS: The results of immunohistochemical analysis of experimental samples showed VEGFR-1 (Flt-1) expression in intervertebral disc and all paradiscal tissues studied. In control samples expression of VEGFR-1 was lower and absent in the intervertebral discs. Comparatively less of VEGFR-2 (KDR/Flk-1) and VEGFR-3 (Flt-4) than VEGFR-1was found in degenerated intervertebral discs and paradiscal tissues. In contiguous control intervertebral discs and control paradiscal tissues VEGFR-2 and-3 receptors were expressed to a lower extent than in experimental tissues or were even totally absent. Also growth factors VEGF-A,-C,-D, as well as von Willebrand factor and to a much lower extent LYVE-1 were differently expressed in experimental and control intervertebral discs.CONCLUSION:In experimental intervertebral disc degeneration, VEGF receptors were expressed in the damaged disc and paradiscal tissues. In the same tissues, VEGF-A,-C, and -D, signs of blood and lymphatic vessel in-growth and reactive/adaptive vertebral bone remodelling were found.
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Department of Veterinary Medicine, St. Matthew's University, P.O. Box 30992 SMB Grand Cayman, KY11204, Cayman Islands British West Indies. Email: sheadley@smu.ky.
A 2-month-old mongrel dog had multifocal necrotizing hepatitis, interstitial pneumonia, and hemorrhagic enteritis. Immunohistochemistry detected antigens of Clostridium piliforme in the intestine and liver, and antigens of canine distemper virus within the lung, urinary bladder, brain, spleen, and liver. Furthermore, uncharacterized intralesional coccidian protozoa were observed within the intestine.
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Section of Veterinary Pathology, Department of Basic Veterinary Sciences.
A central primitive neuroectodermal tumour (PNET) with ependymal differentiation was identified in an 18-month-old female Australian terrier dog that died following signs of central nervous system disease. A large space-occupying haemorrhagic mass replaced the thalamus and part of the hypothalamus of the brain. Microscopical examination revealed a tumour formed by a compact sheet of small cells that contained ependymal and perivascular pseudorosettes. Immunohistochemically, the neoplastic cells variably expressed glial fibrillary acidic protein, neuron-specific enolase, vimentin and cytokeratin, consistent with divergent differentiation of the tumour. This case is thought to represent the first description of PNET with ependymal differentiation in a dog.
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2012-05-23 18:52:25 © BioInfoBank Institute