133 results on '"Eva Sierra"'
Search Results
2. Hepatitis E Virus Infections in Free-Ranging and Captive Cetaceans, Spain, 2011–2022
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Javier Caballero-Gómez, Antonio Rivero-Juarez, Adrián Beato-Benítez, Carolina Fernández-Maldonado, Mariano Domingo, Daniel García-Párraga, Antonio Fernández, Eva Sierra, Rainer G. Ulrich, Eva Martínez-Nevado, Cecilia Sierra-Arqueros, Rocío Canales-Merino, Antonio Rivero, and Ignacio García-Bocanegra
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Microbiology (medical) ,Infectious Diseases ,Spain ,Epidemiology ,Hepatitis E virus ,Humans ,Hepatitis E - Abstract
Epidemiologic surveillance of hepatitis E virus in over 300 free-ranging and captive cetaceans in waters off Spain revealed extensive exposure to this pathogen. We suggest the persistent and widespread presence of hepatitis E in the marine environment off the coast of Spain may be driven by terrestrial sources of contamination.
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- 2022
3. Microscopic Findings in the Cardiac Muscle of Stranded Extreme Deep-Diving Cuvier's Beaked Whales (Ziphius cavirostris)
- Author
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Nakita Câmara, Antonio Fernández, Pedro Herráez, Manuel Arbelo, Marisa Andrada, Cristian M Suárez-Santana, and Eva Sierra
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Instrumentation - Abstract
Considerable information has been gained over the last few decades on several disease processes afflicting free-ranging cetaceans from a pathologist's point of view. Nonetheless, there is still a dearth of studies on the hearts of these species. For this reason, we aimed to improve our understanding of cardiac histological lesions occurring in free-ranging stranded cetaceans and, more specifically, in deep-diving Cuvier's beaked whales. The primary cardiac lesions that have been described include vascular changes, such as congestion, edema, hemorrhage, leukocytosis, and intravascular coagulation; acute degenerative changes, which consist of contraction band necrosis, wavy fibers, cytoplasmic hypereosinophilia, and perinuclear vacuolization; infiltration of inflammatory cells; and finally, the presence and/or deposition of different substances, such as interstitial myoglobin globules, lipofuscin pigment, polysaccharide complexes, and intra- and/or extravascular gas emboli and vessel dilation. This study advances our current knowledge about the histopathological findings in the cardiac muscle of cetaceans, and more specifically, of Cuvier's beaked whales.
- Published
- 2022
4. Cetacean Intracytoplasmic Eosinophilic Globules: A Cytomorphological, Histological, Histochemical, Immunohistochemical, and Proteomic Characterization
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Godinho, Antonio Fernández, Nakita Câmara, Eva Sierra, Manuel Arbelo, Yara Bernaldo de Quirós, Paul D. Jepson, Rob Deaville, Josué Díaz-Delgado, Cristian Suárez-Santana, Ayoze Castro, Julia N. Hernández, and Ana
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albumin ,α1-antitrypsine ,bycatch ,cetacean ,fibrinogen ,intracytoplasmic hyaline globules ,live-stranding ,liver ,marine mammal pathology - Abstract
The nature, etiopathogenesis, and clinicopathologic relevance of the prevalent intracytoplasmic eosinophilic globules (IEGs) within hepatocytes of cetaceans are unknown. This study aims to evaluate the presence and characterize the IEGs in the hepatocytes of cetaceans using histochemical and immunohistochemical electron microscopy, Western blot, lectin histochemistry, and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry techniques. A total of 95/115 (83%) animals (16 species) exhibited histologically evident intracytoplasmic round to oval, single to multiple, hyaline eosinophilic globules within the hepatocytes. These globules were largely PAS-positive, diastase resistant, and were immunopositive for fibrinogen (FB, 97%), albumin (Alb, 85%), and α1-antitrypsine (A1AT, 53%). The IEG positivity for FB and A1AT were correlated with live-stranding, hepatic congestion and a good nutritional status. The cetaceans lacking IEGs were consistently dead stranded and had poor body conditions. The IEGs in 36 bycaught cetaceans were, all except one, FB-positive and A1AT-negative. The IEGs exhibited morphologic and compositional variations at the ultrastructural level, suggesting various stages of development and/or etiopathogenesis(es). The glycocalyx analysis suggested an FB- and A1AT-glycosylation pattern variability between cetaceans and other animals. The proteomic analyses confirmed an association between the IEGs and acute phase proteins, suggesting a relationship between acute stress (i.e., bycatch), disease, and cellular protective mechanisms, allowing pathologists to correlate this morphological change using the acute hepatocytic cell response under certain stress conditions.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Towards understanding host–pathogen dynamics of cetacean poxvirus: attainable approach through the application of a repetitive non-invasive skin sampling in bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) under human care
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Simone Segura-Göthlin, Antonio Fernández, Manuel Arbelo, Javier Almunia, Lorenzo von Fersen, Katrin Baumgartner, José Guerra Garcés, Aldo Gutiérrez Llanos, Idaira Felipe-Jiménez, Ana Colom-Rivero, and Eva Sierra
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Global and Planetary Change ,Ocean Engineering ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Nowadays, zoos and aquariums, along with the constant advancement of sociocultural moral values, are proactively committed to ensuring and safeguarding cetacean health standards. This entails developing new approaches to health assessments by embracing minimally invasive sampling methods and enhanced animal handling and management, among other aspects. Hence, in the present survey, to appraise skin diseases, the implementation of cytology cell samplers as a non-invasive skin sampling device on 18 bottlenose dolphins housed in two facilities in the Canary Islands during the months of April, October, and December 2019 was performed to isolate cetacean poxvirus in tattoo-like lesions through a real-time PCR-based method using the DNA polymerase gene. Samples were repeatedly collected over time from eleven tattoo-like lesions and from apparently healthy skin to serve as a control for all study animals. From a total of 55 skin samples, detection of the poxvirus was attained in 31 (56.36%); specifically, on 20 of 21 samples collected from tattoo-like lesions (95.23%) and on 11 of 34 samples acquired from apparently healthy skin (32.35%). Correspondingly, the current study constitutes the first report of the isolation of cetacean poxvirus in skin samples without macroscopical signs of tattoo lesions in cetaceans. Likewise, ten of the eleven dolphins that showed tattoo lesions housed in Facility 1 were positive for tattoo skin disease, while four dolphins held in Facility 2 were positive for cetacean poxvirus without ever showing clinical evidence of the disease. This raises the question of whether this pathogen can produce latent infections and whether progression of the disease may depend on environmental stimuli, viral load, or the good health/immunological status of individual animals. Accordingly, further scientific research on cetaceans under human care could provide the knowledge, skills, and resources to understand the host–pathogen dynamics of cetacean poxviruses and their effect on cetaceans’ health.
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- 2023
6. First description of a Gammaherpesvirus in a common dolphin (Delphinus delphis) from the Eastern Mediterranean Sea
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Danny Morick, Nadav Davidovich, Ziv Zemah-Shamir, Yael Kroin, Eyal Bigal, Eva Sierra, Simone Segura-Göthlin, Natascha Wosnick, Rachel Ann Hauser-Davis, Dan Tchernov, and Aviad P. Scheinin
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General Veterinary ,General Medicine - Published
- 2023
7. Uso de prótesis esofágicas cubiertas de doble malla en fístulas esofágicas postquirúrgicas y perforaciones esofágicas: experiencia en nuestro centro
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Jesús Gotor Delso, María Teresa Soria Santeodoro, Paula García Cámara, Eva Sierra Moros, Patricia Sanz Segura, José Val Pérez, and Rafael Uribarrena Amezaga
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03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Gastroenterology ,Medicine ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Humanities - Abstract
Resumen Introduccion El uso de protesis esofagicas para el manejo endoscopico de fistulas y perforaciones se ha convertido en un procedimiento habitual. Una de sus limitaciones es su alta tasa de migracion. Para resolver esta situacion, se ha propuesto el uso de protesis cubiertas de doble malla. Objetivos Analizar nuestra experiencia practica en el empleo de protesis esofagicas cubiertas de doble malla (PECDM) (modelo Niti S™ DOUBLE™ Esophageal Metal Stent) en pacientes con fistula o perforacion esofagica. Material y metodos Estudio retrospectivo, descriptivo y unicentrico, donde se incluyen pacientes con diagnostico de fistula o perforacion esofagica, desde noviembre 2010 hasta octubre 2018. Como objetivo primario, se evaluara su eficacia en terminos de exito tecnico. Como objetivo secundario, se analizara su perfil de seguridad. Resultados Se incluyeron inicialmente un total de 31 pacientes, siendo 8 de ellos excluidos por fallecimiento por causas ajenas a la tecnica. Se detecto un exito tecnico del 100%, con un exito primario del 75% tras la recolocacion de la protesis. Entre sus complicaciones, la migracion ocurrio en un 21,7% de los pacientes (n = 5), resolviendose via endoscopica en el 100% de los casos. Conclusiones Segun nuestros hallazgos, las PECDM suponen una alternativa en el tratamiento de fistulas y perforaciones esofagicas, con una alta tasa de exito en la resolucion de fistulas y baja de complicaciones, en contraste con lo expuesto en las series publicadas. En todos los casos, la migracion de la protesis se resolvio mediante recolocacion endoscopica, sin requerir nueva protesis ni cirugia.
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- 2022
8. Review of the safety with biologics in inflammatory bowel disease
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Andrea Pascual, Raquel Vicente, Eva Sierra, and Santiago García-López
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- 2023
9. Retrospective immunohistochemical investigation on dolphin morbillivirus infection by comparing the performance of heterologous monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies – Short communication
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Barbara Iulini, Maria Domenica Pintore, Giovanni Di Guardo, Alessandra Pautasso, Katia Varello, Carla Grattarola, Elena Bozzetta, Eva Sierra, Erika Molica Colella, Enrica Berio, Maria Goria, Federica Giorda, and Cristina Casalone
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General Veterinary ,biology ,Canine distemper ,medicine.drug_class ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Monoclonal antibody ,Rinderpest virus ,Virology ,Serology ,Morbillivirus ,Polyclonal antibodies ,Monoclonal ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Animals ,Immunohistochemistry ,Rabbits ,Morbillivirus Infections ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Dolphin morbillivirus (DMV) is a pathogen of great concern in free-ranging cetaceans. Confirmation and staging of morbillivirus infections rely on histology and immunohistochemistry (IHC), following molecular detection. As at the present time no specific antibodies (Abs) against DMV are available, two heterologous Abs have been used worldwide for the examinations of morbillivirus infections of cetaceans. One is a monoclonal Ab (MoAb) prepared against the N protein of canine distemper virus (CDV), whereas the other is a polyclonal Ab raised in rabbits against rinderpest virus (RPV). Both Abs are known to show cross-reactivity with DMV. In this study we compared the labelling quality and the neuroanatomical distribution of staining with these two Abs by means of IHC analysis. To this end, serial sections of the target organs from ten free-ranging stranded cetaceans, previously diagnosed as being infected with DMV by PCR and/or serology, were subjected to IHC. The brain, lungs and lymph nodes of one animal were found to be positive with both Abs. From two other animals, the brain and the spleen, respectively, tested positive only with the polyclonal Ab. In the positive brain tissues, multifocal immunostaining was observed, with similar staining location and extent, with the two antibodies tested. Our results suggest that the polyclonal anti-RPV Ab might have a stronger binding activity to DMV than the anti-CDV MoAb. Nevertheless, the elaboration and use of specific anti-DMV Abs might be essential to guarantee conclusive results in diagnostic and pathogenetic investigations.
- Published
- 2021
10. Bacteremia and Aortic Valvular Endocarditis in a Eurasian Stone-Curlew (Burhinus oedicnemus distinctus) due to Streptococcus dysgalactiae
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Cristian M. Suárez-Santana, Antonio Fernández, Óscar Quesada-Canales, Ana Isabel Vela, José Navarro-Sarmiento, and Eva Sierra
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Charadriiformes ,Endocarditis ,Ecology ,Streptococcal Infections ,Animals ,Streptococcus ,Bacteremia ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Burhinus oedicnemus distinctus is an endemic subspecies of Eurasian Stone-curlew present in the Canary Islands. Their populations are rapidly declining, mainly because of anthropogenic impacts. This report describes valvular endocarditis and septicemia in a Eurasian Stone-Curlew with left foot loss and severe contralateral bumblefoot.
- Published
- 2022
11. 36 - EFECTIVIDAD Y SEGURIDAD DE LA TERAPIA CON USTEKINUMAB Y VEDOLIZUMAB EN PACIENTES CON FÍSTULA PERIANAL COMPLEJA: ESTUDIO HEAL
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María José Casanova, María Chaparro, Berta Caballol, María José García, Francisco Mesonero, Cristina Rubín de Célix, Patricia Suárez-álvarez, Rocío Ferreiro-Iglesias, María del Mar Martín-Rodríguez, Ruth de Francisco, Pilar Varela-Trastoy, Guillermo Bastida, Marta Carrillo-Palau, Andrea Núñez-Ortiz, Patricia Ramírez-de la Piscina, Daniel Ceballos, Daniel Hervías-Cruz, Roser Muñoz-Pérez, Benito Velayos, Fernando Bermejo, David Busquets, Manuel Cabacino, Patricia Camo-Monteverde, Ignacio Marín-Jiménez, Carmen Muñoz, Luisa Carmen de la Peña-Negro, Eva Sierra-Moros, Jesús Barrio, Eduard Brunet-Mas, Luis Bujanda, Fiorella Cañete, Fernando Gomollón, Noemí Manceñido-Marcos, Iago Rodríguez-Lago, María Carmen Rodríguez-Grau, Beatriz Sicilia, Sandra Torra-Alsina, Laura Arranz-Hernández, Daniel Carpio, Mariana Fe García-Sepulcre, Carlos González-Muñoza, José María Huguet, Lucía Márquez-Mosquera, María Pilar López-Serrano, Ángel Ponferrada-Díaz, and Javier P. Gisbert
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Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2023
12. 68 - PAPEL DEL HLA DQA1*05 EN LA RESPUESTA A TRATAMIENTO BIOLÓGICO CON ANTI-TNF EN PACIENTES CON ENFERMEDAD INFLAMATORIA INTESTINAL
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Andrea Pascual Oliver, Camila Cuaran Cetina, Diego Casas Deza, Santiago García López, Eva Sierra Moros, Pilar Corsino Roche, and Raquel Vicente Lidón
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Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2023
13. Diabetic neuropathy in hands: An endemic complication waiting to unfold?
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Michel Coppieters, Andrea Schroeter, Ricardo J. Andrade, Eva Sierra Silvestre, Leanne Bisset, AMS - Rehabilitation & Development, Neuromechanics, and AMS - Musculoskeletal Health
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Cornea ,Polyneuropathies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Microscopy, Confocal ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Diabetic Neuropathies ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Internal Medicine ,Humans - Abstract
This cross-sectional study aimed to quantify the somatosensory dysfunction in the hand in people with diabetes with distal symmetrical polyneuropathy (DSPN) in hands; and explore early signs of nerve dysfunction in people with diabetes without DSPN in hands. The clinical diagnosis of DSPN was confirmed with electrodiagnosis and corneal confocal microscopy. Thermal and mechanical nerve function in the hand was assessed using Quantitative Sensory Tests. Measurements were compared between healthy participants (n=31), people with diabetes without DSPN (n=35), people with DSPN in feet but not hands (DSPN FEET ONLY; n=31); and people with DSPN in hands and feet (DSPN HANDS & FEET; n=28) using one-way between-group analyses of variance. The somatosensory profile of the hand in people with DSPN HANDS & FEET showed widespread loss of thermal and mechanical detection. This profile in hands is comparable to the profile in the feet of people with DSPN in feet. Remarkably, people with DSPN FEET ONLY already showed a similar profile of widespread loss of nerve function in their hands. People with diabetes without DSPN in feet already had some nerve dysfunction in their hands. These findings suggest that nerve function assessment in hands should become more routine in people with diabetes.
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- 2022
14. Spatial variation in mechanical properties along the sciatic and tibial nerves: An ultrasound shear wave elastography study
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Ricardo J. Andrade, Sandro R. Freitas, François Hug, Michel W. Coppieters, Eva Sierra-Silvestre, Antoine Nordez, Neuromechanics, AMS - Musculoskeletal Health, and AMS - Rehabilitation & Development
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musculoskeletal diseases ,History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Rehabilitation ,Mononeuropathies ,Biomedical Engineering ,Biophysics ,Ultrasound shear wave elastography ,Peripheral Nervous System Diseases ,Sciatic neuropathy ,Non-invasive mechanics ,musculoskeletal system ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Young Adult ,Nerve biomechanics ,Elasticity Imaging Techniques ,Humans ,Diagnostic imaging ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Business and International Management ,Tibial Nerve ,Peripheral nervous system ,Ankle Joint ,Ultrasonography - Abstract
Ultrasound shear wave elastography has become a promising method in peripheral neuropathy evaluation. Shear wave velocity, a surrogate measure of stiffness, tends to increase in peripheral neuropathies regardless of etiology. However, little is known about the spatial variation in shear wave velocity of healthy peripheral nerves and how tensile loading is distributed along their course. Sixty healthy young adults were scanned using ultrasound shear wave elastography. Five regions of the sciatic (Sciatic PROXIMAL, Sciatic DISTAL) and tibial nerve (Tibial PROXIMAL, Tibial INTERMEDIATE, and Tibial DISTAL) were assessed in two hip positions that alter nerve tension: 1) neutral in supine position; and 2) flexed at 90°. Knee and ankle remained in full-extension and neutral position. We observed spatial variations in shear wave velocity along the sciatic and tibial nerve (P < 0.0001). Shear wave velocities were significantly different between all nerve locations with the exception of Sciatic DISTAL vs. Tibial INTERMEDIATE (P = 0.999) and Tibial PROXIMAL vs. Tibial INTERMEDIATE (P = 0.708), and tended to increase in the proximal-distal direction at both upper and lower leg segments. Shear wave velocity increased with hip flexion (+54.3%; P < 0.0001), but the increase was not different among nerve locations (P = 0.233). This suggests that the increase in tensile loading with hip flexion is uniformally distributed along the nerve tract. These results highlight the importance of considering both limb position and transducer location for biomechanical and clinical assessments of peripheral nerve stiffness. These findings provide evidence about how tension is distributed along the course of sciatic and tibial nerves.
- Published
- 2022
15. Molecular Characterization of Herpesviral Encephalitis in Cetaceans: Correlation with Histopathological and Immunohistochemical Findings
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Eva Sierra, Antonio Fernández, Carolina Fernández-Maldonado, Simona Sacchini, Idaira Felipe-Jiménez, Simone Segura-Göthlin, Ana Colom-Rivero, Nakita Câmara, Raquel Puig-Lozano, Anna Maria Rambaldi, Cristian Suárez-Santana, and Manuel Arbelo
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General Veterinary ,Animal Science and Zoology ,alphaherpesvirus ,gammaherpesvirus ,encephalitis ,meningitis ,malacia ,haemorrhages ,intranuclear inclusion bodies ,morbillivirus ,superinfection ,qPCR - Abstract
Herpesviruses are causative agents of meningitis and encephalitis in cetaceans, which are among the main leading known natural causes of death in these species. Brain samples from 103 stranded cetaceans were retrospectively screened for the presence of herpesvirus DNA in the brain. Molecular detection of Cetacean Morbillivirus was performed in HV positive brain cases. Histopathologic evaluation of brain samples included the presence or absence of the following findings (n = 7): meningitis, perivascular cuffings, microgliosis, intranuclear inclusion bodies, malacia, neuronal necrosis and neurophagic nodules, and haemorrhages. Histological evidence of the involvement of other etiological agents led to complementary analysis. We detected the presence of alpha and gamma-HVs in 12 out of 103 (11.6%) brain samples from stranded cetaceans of five different species: one bottlenose dolphin, six striped dolphins, three Atlantic spotted dolphins, one Cuvier’s beaked whale, and one common dolphin. Pathogenic factors such as viral strain, age, sex, and the presence of co-infections were analysed and correlated with the brain histopathological findings in each case. Herpesvirus was more prevalent in males, juveniles, and calves and a 41.6% incidence of co-infections in the brain was detected in our study: three with Dolphin Morbillivirus, one with Staphilococcus aureus septicaemia and one with Brucella spp.
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- 2022
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- View/download PDF
16. Microscopic Findings in the Cardiac Muscle of Stranded Extreme Deep-Diving Cuvier's Beaked Whales (
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Nakita, Câmara, Antonio, Fernández, Pedro, Herráez, Manuel, Arbelo, Marisa, Andrada, Cristian M, Suárez-Santana, and Eva, Sierra
- Abstract
Considerable information has been gained over the last few decades on several disease processes afflicting free-ranging cetaceans from a pathologist's point of view. Nonetheless, there is still a dearth of studies on the hearts of these species. For this reason, we aimed to improve our understanding of cardiac histological lesions occurring in free-ranging stranded cetaceans and, more specifically, in deep-diving Cuvier's beaked whales. The primary cardiac lesions that have been described include vascular changes, such as congestion, edema, hemorrhage, leukocytosis, and intravascular coagulation; acute degenerative changes, which consist of contraction band necrosis, wavy fibers, cytoplasmic hypereosinophilia, and perinuclear vacuolization; infiltration of inflammatory cells; and finally, the presence and/or deposition of different substances, such as interstitial myoglobin globules, lipofuscin pigment, polysaccharide complexes, and intra- and/or extravascular gas emboli and vessel dilation. This study advances our current knowledge about the histopathological findings in the cardiac muscle of cetaceans, and more specifically, of Cuvier's beaked whales.
- Published
- 2022
17. Cellular Prion Protein Expression in the Brain Tissue from
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Clotilde Beatrice, Angelucci, Roberto, Giacominelli-Stuffler, Marina, Baffoni, Cristina Esmeralda, Di Francesco, Gabriella, Di Francesco, Ludovica, Di Renzo, Manuela, Tittarelli, Antonio, Petrella, Carla, Grattarola, Sandro, Mazzariol, Eva, Sierra, Antonio, Fernández, and Giovanni, Di Guardo
- Published
- 2022
18. Cetacean 'gas-bubble thromboembolic polycystic liver disease': 'Budd-Chiari like syndrome' in dolphins?
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Antonio Fernandez, Paul D Jepson, Josue Diaz-Delgado, Yara Bernaldo de Quiros, Eva Sierra, Blanca Mompeo, Ana Isabel Vela, Giovanni Di Guardo, Cristian Suarez-Santana, Antonio Espinosa de los Monteros, Pedro Herraez, Marisa Andrada, Maria Jose Caballero, Miguel Rivero, Francesco Consoli, Ayoze Castro, Oscar Quesada, and Manuel Arbelo
- Abstract
Nearly two decades ago, pathologic examination results suggested acoustic factors, such as mid-frequency active naval military sonar (MFAS) could be the cause of acute decompression-like sickness in stranded beaked whales. Acute systemic gas embolism in these beaked whales was published together with enigmatic cystic liver lesions (CLL), characterized by intrahepatic encapsulated gas-filled cysts, tentatively interpreted as “gas-bubble” lesions in various cetacean species. Here we provide a pathologic reinterpretation of CLL in cetaceans. From 1,200 cetaceans necropsied, CLL were only observed in striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba), with a low prevalence (2%), and recapitulated pathologic features of Budd-Chiari syndrome in humans. Our results strongly suggest that CLL are the result of the combination of pre-existing or concomitant hepatic vascular disorder (e.g., severe hepatobiliary trematodiasis) superimposed and exacerbated by gas bubbles, and clearly differ from acute systemic gas embolism in stranded beaked whales linked to MFAS.
- Published
- 2022
19. Seminoma in an adult striped dolphin Stenella coeruleoalba: tomographic, macroscopical, histological and immunohistochemical study
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A. Espinosa de los Monteros, Eva Sierra, Pablo J Díaz-Santana, Manuel Arbelo, Raquel Puig-Lozano, Anna Maria Rambaldi, Cristian M. Suárez-Santana, Antonio Fernández, and Francesco Consoli
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Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Testicular Neoplasm ,Vimentin ,Stenella coeruleoalba ,Aquatic Science ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Stenella ,Testicular Neoplasms ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Animals ,Tomography ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,CD117 ,Testicular mass ,Intestinal loops ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Seminoma ,medicine.disease ,Spain ,biology.protein ,Immunohistochemistry ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
Testicular neoplasms have been extensively described and characterized in domestic animals, but reports in wildlife species, including marine mammals, are scarce. This case report describes a testicular seminoma in an adult striped dolphin Stenella coeruleoalba stranded along the coasts of the Canary Islands. Post-mortem computerized tomography (CT) showed a prominent enlargement of the cranial pole of the right testicle, displacing the intestinal loops. Necropsy gross findings confirmed the presence of a testicular mass, bulging at the cut surface, with multiple well-delimitated whitish nodular lesions. Histologically, intratubular and diffuse neoplastic germinative cell proliferation was described. Complementary immunohistochemical assessments for vimentin and CD117 antibodies were negative. To the authors’ knowledge, this is the first seminoma described in a S. coeruleoalba. We suggest that post-mortem (PM) pre-necropsy CT in dolphins is a useful tool for anatomic-guided pathology in such cases.
- Published
- 2020
20. First Case of Brevetoxicosis Linked to Rough-Toothed Dolphin (Steno bredanensis) Mass-Mortality Event in Eastern Central Atlantic Ocean: A Climate Change Effect?
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Antonio Fernández, Eva Sierra, Manuel Arbelo, Ana Gago-Martínez, Jose Manuel Leao Martins, Natalia García-Álvarez, Yara Bernaldo de Quiros, Marina Arregui, Ana Isabel Vela, and Josue Díaz-Delgado
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Global and Planetary Change ,Ocean Engineering ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) have been increasingly recorded over the last decades and much work has linked these events to multiple oceanographic and climate disturbances. HABs can affect ecosystems either as events that affect dissolved oxygen, clog fish gills, or smother corals or through the production of biotoxins which affect living marine resources through food web transfers or aerosols. HAB represent a natural driver of decline and potential extinction of aquatic organisms, from invertebrates to mammals, which may offer little evolutionary adaptation particularly in very high and long-lasting exposures. Despite numerous multispecies mass-mortality events linked to HAB-associated biotoxicosis globally, there are no records in cetaceans off the central eastern Atlantic Ocean. Herein, we report the epidemiology, pathologic, microbiologic and toxicologic investigation results attesting to the first documentation of cetacean mass-mortality in European waters associated with brevetoxins. Twelve rough-toothed dolphins (Steno bredanensis) were found dead adrift or beached along the southwestern coast of Gran Canaria from April 28th to May 7th, 2008. Although pathologic examinations were limited by moderate to advanced autolysis and decomposition of the carcasses, consistent findings included multisystemic hemorrhage and undigested ingesta within the gastric compartments, mainly salema porgy (Sarpa salpa). Toxicologic analysis of gastric contents identified PbTx2 and PbTx3 brevetoxins. Our results provide compelling toxicopathologic evidence of fatal brevetoxicosis in a cohort of rough-toothed dolphins. These data add to the limited knowledge on pathology of HAB in cetaceans and provide the first account of brevetoxicosis in European waters. No other mass-mortality or individual fatality of any cetacean species has been linked to brevetoxicosis in the Canary Islands since this event.
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- 2022
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21. Nocardiosis in Free-Ranging Cetaceans from the Central-Eastern Atlantic Ocean and Contiguous Mediterranean Sea
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Pablo Díaz-Santana, Antonio Fernández, Josue Díaz-Delgado, Ana Isabel Vela, Lucas Domínguez, Cristian Suárez-Santana, Raquel Puig-Lozano, Carolina Fernández-Maldonado, Eva Sierra, and Manuel Arbelo
- Subjects
cetacean ,nocardiosis ,striped dolphin ,bottlenose dolphin ,Canary Islands ,Andalusia ,Spain ,General Veterinary ,Sanidad animal ,Animal Science and Zoology ,human activities ,Piscicultura - Abstract
We report the pathologic features of nocardiosis in five free-ranging delphinids from the Canary Islands and Andalusia, namely four striped dolphins (Stenella coerulealba) and one bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus). All animals had a multiorgan (disseminated) pattern of infection involving suppurative to pyogranulomatous and thromboembolic lesions in two or more organs. Most affected organs were (by decreasing order) lung, pulmonary lymph nodes, liver, kidney, adrenal glands, and central nervous system. Typical intralesional and intravascular branched and filamentous bacteria were highlighted by Grocott’s methenamine silver and Gram stains. Bacterial analysis including 16S rRNA gene sequencing identified Nocardia farcinica in two striped dolphins and Nocardia otitidiscaviarum in one striped dolphin and the bottlenose dolphin. All dolphins tested (n = 4) for cetacean morbillivirus were negative; one dolphin had concurrent cutaneous herpesvirosis. These results provide the first record of N. otitidiscaviarum in cetaceans, the first account of N. farcinica in free-ranging dolphins, and confirmation of nocardiosis in central eastern Atlantic Ocean. These results expand the known geographic range of nocardiosis in cetaceans.
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- 2022
- Full Text
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22. Immigrant IBD Patients in Spain Are Younger, Have More Extraintestinal Manifestations and Use More Biologics Than Native Patients
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Ana Gutiérrez, Pedro Zapater, Elena Ricart, María González-Vivó, Jordi Gordillo, David Olivares, Isabel Vera, Míriam Mañosa, Javier P. Gisbert, Mariam Aguas, Eugenia Sánchez-Rodríguez, Maia Bosca-Watts, Viviana Laredo, Blau Camps, Ignacio Marín-Jiménez, Yamile Zabana, María Dolores Martín-Arranz, Roser Muñoz, Mercè Navarro, Eva Sierra, Lucía Madero, Milagros Vela, José Lázaro Pérez-Calle, Empar Sainz, Xavier Calvet, Lara Arias, Victor Morales, Fernando Bermejo, Luis Fernández-Salazar, Manuel Van Domselaar, Luisa De Castro, Cristina Rodríguez, Carmen Muñoz-Villafranca, Rufo Lorente, Montserrat Rivero, Eva Iglesias, Belén Herreros, David Busquets, Joan Riera, María Pilar Martínez-Montiel, Marta Roldón, Oscar Roncero, Esther Hinojosa, Mónica Sierra, Jesús Barrio, Ruth De Francisco, José Huguet, Olga Merino, Daniel Carpio, Daniel Ginard, Fernando Muñoz, Marta Piqueras, Pedro Almela, Federico Argüelles-Arias, Guillermo Alcaín, Luis Bujanda, Noemí Manceñido, Alfredo J. Lucendo, Pilar Varela, Iago Rodríguez-Lago, Laura Ramos, Laura Sempere, Eva Sesé, Manuel Barreiro-de Acosta, Eugeni Domènech, Rubén Francés, [Gutiérrez A] Servicio Medicina Digestiva, Hospital General Universitario Alicante, Alicante, Spain. IIS Isabial, Hospital General Universitario Alicante, Alicante, Spain. Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Hepáticas y Digestivas (CIBERehd), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain. [Zapater P] IIS Isabial, Hospital General Universitario Alicante, Alicante, Spain. Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Hepáticas y Digestivas (CIBERehd), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain. Unidad Farmacología Clínica, Hospital General Universitario Alicante, Alicante, Spain. Instituto IDIBE, Universidad Miguel Hernández, San Juan de Alicante, Spain. [Ricart E] Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Hepáticas y Digestivas (CIBERehd), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain. Servicio de Medicina Digestiva Hospital Clínic, Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS), Barcelona, Spain.[González-Vivó M] Servicio Medicina Digestiva, Hospital del Mar, IMIM (Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute), Barcelona, Spain. [Gordillo J] Servicio Patología Digestiva, Hospital de la Santa Creu I Sant Pau, Barcelona, Spain. [Olivares D] Servicio Medicina Digestiva, Hospital Universitario Clínico San Carlos, Madrid, Spain. [Piqueras M] Servicio Medicina Digestiva, Hospital de Terrassa, Consorci Sanitari de Terrassa, Barcelona, Spain, Consorci Sanitari de Terrassa, [Gutiérrez A] Servicio Medicina Digestiva, Hospital General Universitario Alicante, Alicante, Spain. IIS Isabial, Hospital General Universitario Alicante, Alicante, Spain. Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Hepáticas y Digestivas (CIBERehd), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain. [Zapater P] IIS Isabial, Hospital General Universitario Alicante, Alicante, Spain. Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Hepáticas y Digestivas (CIBERehd), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain. Unidad Farmacología Clínica, Hospital General Universitario Alicante, Alicante, Spain. Instituto IDIBE, Universidad Miguel Hernández, San Juan de Alicante, Spain. [Ricart E] Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Hepáticas y Digestivas (CIBERehd), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain. Servicio de Medicina Digestiva Hospital Clínic, Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS), Barcelona, Spain. [González-Vivó M] Servicio Medicina Digestiva, Hospital del Mar, IMIM (Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute), Barcelona, Spain. [Gordillo J] Servicio Patología Digestiva, Hospital de la Santa Creu I Sant Pau, Barcelona, Spain. [Olivares D] Servicio Medicina Digestiva, Hospital Universitario Clínico San Carlos, Madrid, Spain. [Morales V] Servicio Medicina Digestiva, Hospital General de Granollers, Granollers, Spain, and Hospital General de Granollers
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Digestive System Diseases::Gastrointestinal Diseases::Digestive System Diseases::Gastrointestinal Diseases::Intestinal Diseases::Inflammatory Bowel Diseases::Crohn Disease [DISEASES] ,Medicine (General) ,phenotype ,Digestive System Diseases::Gastrointestinal Diseases::Gastroenteritis::Inflammatory Bowel Diseases::Crohn Disease [DISEASES] ,General Medicine ,immigrant ,Inflammatory bowel diseases ,Crohn, Malaltia de ,Malalties inflamatòries intestinals ,enfermedades del sistema digestivo::enfermedades gastrointestinales::gastroenteritis::enfermedad inflamatoria intestinal::enfermedad de Crohn [ENFERMEDADES] ,Fenotip ,enfermedades del sistema digestivo::enfermedades gastrointestinales::gastroenteritis::enfermedad inflamatoria intestinal [ENFERMEDADES] ,Digestive System Diseases::Gastrointestinal Diseases::Digestive System Diseases::Gastrointestinal Diseases::Digestive System Diseases::Gastrointestinal Diseases::Intestinal Diseases::Digestive System Diseases::Gastrointestinal Diseases::Intestinal Diseases::Inflammatory Bowel Diseases::Colitis, Ulcerative [DISEASES] ,Crohn's disease ,R5-920 ,Colitis ulcerosa ,inflammatory bowel disease ,Immigrants ,enfermedades del sistema digestivo::enfermedades gastrointestinales::enfermedades del sistema digestivo::enfermedades gastrointestinales::enfermedades del sistema digestivo::enfermedades gastrointestinales::enfermedades intestinales::enfermedades del sistema digestivo::enfermedades gastrointestinales::enfermedades intestinales::enfermedad inflamatoria intestinal::colitis ulcerosa [ENFERMEDADES] ,Persons::Emigrants and Immigrants [NAMED GROUPS] ,biologics ,Intestins - Inflamació ,Digestive System Diseases::Gastrointestinal Diseases::Gastroenteritis::Inflammatory Bowel Diseases [DISEASES] ,personas::emigrantes e inmigrantes [DENOMINACIONES DE GRUPOS] ,ulcerative colitis - Abstract
BackgroundPrevious studies comparing immigrant ethnic groups and native patients with IBD have yielded clinical and phenotypic differences. To date, no study has focused on the immigrant IBD population in Spain.MethodsProspective, observational, multicenter study comparing cohorts of IBD patients from ENEIDA-registry who were born outside Spain with a cohort of native patients.ResultsWe included 13,524 patients (1,864 immigrant and 11,660 native). The immigrants were younger (45 ± 12 vs. 54 ± 16 years, p < 0.001), had been diagnosed younger (31 ± 12 vs. 36 ± 15 years, p < 0.001), and had a shorter disease duration (14 ± 7 vs. 18 ± 8 years, p < 0.001) than native patients. Family history of IBD (9 vs. 14%, p < 0.001) and smoking (30 vs. 40%, p < 0.001) were more frequent among native patients. The most prevalent ethnic groups among immigrants were Caucasian (41.5%), followed by Latin American (30.8%), Arab (18.3%), and Asian (6.7%). Extraintestinal manifestations, mainly musculoskeletal affections, were more frequent in immigrants (19 vs. 11%, p < 0.001). Use of biologics, mainly anti-TNF, was greater in immigrants (36 vs. 29%, p < 0.001). The risk of having extraintestinal manifestations [OR: 2.23 (1.92–2.58, p < 0.001)] and using biologics [OR: 1.13 (1.0–1.26, p = 0.042)] was independently associated with immigrant status in the multivariate analyses.ConclusionsCompared with native-born patients, first-generation-immigrant IBD patients in Spain were younger at disease onset and showed an increased risk of having extraintestinal manifestations and using biologics. Our study suggests a featured phenotype of immigrant IBD patients in Spain, and constitutes a new landmark in the epidemiological characterization of immigrant IBD populations in Southern Europe.
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- 2022
23. Methodology and Neuromarkers for Cetaceans’ Brains
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Fernández, Simona Sacchini, Pedro Herráez, Manuel Arbelo, Antonio Espinosa de los Monteros, Eva Sierra, Miguel Rivero, Cristiano Bombardi, and Antonio
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cetaceans ,dolphins ,beaked whales ,neuroanatomy ,neuropathology ,methodology ,immunohistochemistry ,neuromarkers - Abstract
Cetacean brain sampling may be an arduous task due to the difficulty of collecting and histologically preparing such rare and large specimens. Thus, one of the main challenges of working with cetaceans’ brains is to establish a valid methodology for an optimal manipulation and fixation of the brain tissue, which allows the samples to be viable for neuroanatomical and neuropathological studies. With this in view, we validated a methodology in order to preserve the quality of such large brains (neuroanatomy/neuropathology) and at the same time to obtain fresh brain samples for toxicological, virological, and microbiological analysis (neuropathology). A fixation protocol adapted to brains, of equal or even three times the size of human brains, was studied and tested. Finally, we investigated the usefulness of a panel of 20 antibodies (neuromarkers) associated with the normal structure and function of the brain, pathogens, age-related, and/or functional variations. The sampling protocol and some of the 20 neuromarkers have been thought to explore neurodegenerative diseases in these long-lived animals. To conclude, many of the typical measures used to evaluate neuropathological changes do not tell us if meaningful cellular changes have occurred. Having a wide panel of antibodies and histochemical techniques available allows for delving into the specific behavior of the neuronal population of the brain nuclei and to get a “fingerprint” of their real status.
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- 2022
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24. Budd-Chiari-like pathology in dolphins
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Antonio Fernandez, Paul D. Jepson, Josue Diaz-Delgado, Yara Bernaldo de Quiros, Eva Sierra, Blanca Mompeo, Ana Isabel Vela, Giovanni Di Guardo, Cristian Suarez-Santana, Antonio Espinosa de los Monteros, Pedro Herraez, Marisa Andrada, Maria Jose Caballero, Miguel Rivero, Francesco Consoli, Ayoze Castro-Alonso, Oscar Quesada-Canales, and Manuel Arbelo
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Multidisciplinary ,Stenella ,Dolphins ,Whales ,Animals ,Embolism, Air ,Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell - Abstract
Nearly two decades ago, pathologic examination results suggested that acoustic factors, such as mid-frequency active naval military sonar (MFAS) could be the cause of acute decompression-like sickness in stranded beaked whales. Acute systemic gas embolism in these whales was reported together with enigmatic cystic liver lesions (CLL), characterized by intrahepatic encapsulated gas-filled cysts, tentatively interpreted as “gas-bubble” lesions in various other cetacean species. Here we provide a pathologic reinterpretation of CLL in odontocetes. Among 1,200 cetaceans necropsied, CLL were only observed in four striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba), with a low prevalence (2%, N = 179). Together, our data strongly suggest that CLL are the result of the combination of a pre-existing or concomitant hepatic vascular disorder superimposed and exacerbated by gas bubbles, and clearly differ from acute systemic gas embolism in stranded beaked whales that is linked to MFAS. Budd-Chiari-like syndrome in dolphins is hypothesized based on the present pathologic findings. Nonetheless, further researched is warranted to determine precise etiopathogenesis(es) and contributing factors for CLL in cetaceans.
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- 2022
25. Traducción al español y validación de un cuestionario breve de medida del control de la enfermedad inflamatoria intestinal desde la perspectiva del paciente: IBD-Control, EII-Control
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Santiago García López, Pilar Corsino Roche, Raquel Vicente Lidón, José Miguel Boudet Barraca, Fernando Gomollón García, Eva Sierra Moros, Paula García Cámara, and Patricia Sanz Segura
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Hepatology ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Medicine ,business ,Humanities - Abstract
Objetivo La medida de los resultados percibidos por el paciente en la asistencia de la enfermedad inflamatoria intestinal (EII) adquiere cada vez más importancia. Existe una herramienta sencilla y validada en inglés para este fin: el «IBD-Control». Nuestro objetivo es traducirlo al español, adaptarlo y validarlo. Pacientes y métodos Se tradujo el IBD-Control, generando el instrumento en español «EII-Control», y se validó prospectivamente. Los pacientes cumplimentaban el EII-Control y otros cuestionarios que servían de comparadores de referencia. El gastroenterólogo realizaba una valoración global de la enfermedad, calculaba índices de actividad y registraba el tratamiento. Un subgrupo de pacientes repitió toda la valoración en una segunda visita. Se analizó también la utilidad de escalas resumidas del EII-Control (el EII-Control-8 y el EII-Control-EVA). Resultados Se incluyeron 249 pacientes con EII (101 repitieron la segunda visita). Estándares psicométricos del test: consistencia interna: α de Cronbach para EII-Control 0,83 con fuerte correlación entre EII-Control-8 y EII-Control-EVA (r = 0,5); reproducibilidad: correlación intraclase 0,70 para EII-Control; validez de constructo: correlaciones de moderadas a fuertes entre EII-Control, EII-Control-8 y EII-Control-EVA frente a comparadores; validez discriminante: p
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- 2022
26. NSAID-induced ischemic colitis
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Olivia Sierra Gabarda, María Espinosa Pérez, Diego Casas Deza, Luis Javier Lamuela Calvo, Mónica Llorente Barrio, Rosario María Monzón Báez, Eva Sierra Moros, and Javier Alcedo González
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Adult ,Diarrhea ,Male ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,Gastroenterology ,Humans ,General Medicine ,Colitis ,Colitis, Ischemic ,Abdominal Pain - Abstract
We present the case of a 38-year-old man with no previous medical history who went to the emergency department due to abdominal pain and diarrheal stools with blood of 24 hours of evolution. The patient reports consumption of anti-inflammatories the previous days due to back pain.
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- 2022
27. Cellular Prion Protein Expression in the Brain Tissue from Brucella ceti-Infected Striped Dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba)
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Clotilde Beatrice Angelucci, Roberto Giacominelli-Stuffler, Marina Baffoni, Cristina Esmeralda Di Francesco, Gabriella Di Francesco, Ludovica Di Renzo, Manuela Tittarelli, Antonio Petrella, Carla Grattarola, Sandro Mazzariol, Eva Sierra, Antonio Fernández, and Giovanni Di Guardo
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neurobrucellosis ,Brucella ceti ,cellular prion protein ,striped dolphin ,Stenella coeruloeoalba ,brain ,pathogenesis ,infection ,General Veterinary ,Animal Science and Zoology ,human activities - Abstract
Brucella ceti, a zoonotic pathogen of major concern to cetacean health and conservation, is responsible for severe meningo-encephalitic/myelitic lesions in striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba), often leading to their stranding and death. This study investigated, for the first time, the cellular prion protein (PrPc) expression in the brain tissue from B. ceti-infected, neurobrucellosis-affected striped dolphins. Seven B. ceti-infected, neurobrucellosis-affected striped dolphins, found stranded along the Italian coastline (6) and in the Canary Islands (1), were investigated, along with five B. ceti-uninfected striped dolphins from the coast of Italy, carrying no brain lesions, which served as negative controls. Western Blot (WB) and immunohistochemistry (IHC) with an anti-PrP murine monoclonal antibody were carried out on the brain parenchyma of these dolphins. While PrPc IHC yielded inconclusive results, a clear-cut PrPc expression of different intensity was found by means of WB analyses in the brain tissue of all the seven herein investigated, B. ceti-infected and neurobrucellosis-affected cetacean specimens, with two dolphins stranded along the Italian coastline and one dolphin beached in Canary Islands also exhibiting a statistically significant increase in cerebral PrPc expression as compared to the five Brucella spp.-negative control specimens. The significantly increased PrPc expression found in three out of seven B. ceti-infected, neurobrucellosis-affected striped dolphins does not allow us to draw any firm conclusion(s) about the putative role of PrPc as a host cell receptor for B. ceti. Should this be the case, an upregulation of PrPc mRNA in the brain tissue of neurobrucellosis-affected striped dolphins could be hypothesized during the different stages of B. ceti infection, as previously shown in murine bone marrow cells challenged with Escherichia coli. Noteworthy, the inflammatory infiltrates seen in the brain and in the cervico-thoracic spinal cord segments from the herein investigated, B. ceti-infected and neurobrucellosis-affected striped dolphins were densely populated by macrophage/histiocyte cells, often harboring Brucella spp. antigen in their cytoplasm, similarly to what was reported in macrophages from mice experimentally challenged with B. abortus. Notwithstanding the above, much more work is needed in order to properly assess the role of PrPc, if any, as a host cell receptor for B. ceti in striped dolphins.
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- 2022
28. Distal symmetrical polyneuropathy: it’s (also) in your hands
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Andrea Schroeter, Ricardo Ricardo, Michel Coppieters, and Eva Sierra-Silvestre
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- 2021
29. The Validation of a Non-Invasive Skin Sampling Device for Detecting Cetacean Poxvirus
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Antonio Fernández, Simone Segura-Göthlin, Manuel Arbelo, Javier Almunia, Ana Colom-Rivero, Idaira Felipe-Jiménez, and Eva Sierra
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Veterinary medicine ,skin lesions ,health indicator ,Article ,Sampling device ,cetaceans ,SF600-1100 ,Biopsy ,Medicine ,Sampling (medicine) ,biopsy ,DNA extraction ,cytology cell sampler ,General Veterinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,integumentary system ,business.industry ,Non invasive ,fungi ,cetacean poxvirus ,welfare ,PCR ,QL1-991 ,Animal Science and Zoology ,business ,Skin lesion ,Zoology - Abstract
Simple Summary The current growing social awareness of animal welfare has led to the development of welfare indicators, which are effective tools for assessing each of the integrated aspects of this multidisciplinary issue. Hence, skin diseases have been suggested as potential general health indicators for use in cetaceans. Particularly cetacean poxvirus causes distinguishable hyperpigmented “ring” or “tattoo” lesions that affect cetaceans both in the wild and in managed facilities. However, most studies have analyzed these characteristic lesions through visual appraisal, while only a few have implemented diagnostic methods to corroborate the presence of the virus. To this end, skin biopsies are usually the sampling method selected, although they are considered to be an intrusive procedure. In this study, we analyzed sloughed skin sampled with cytology cell samplers (CCSs) in 12 tattoo-like lesions from two free-ranging cetaceans stranded in the Canary Islands. We employed two different DNA extraction methods and compared the effectiveness of the device with that of biopsies. All the lesions resulted positive for cetacean poxvirus, obtaining reliable data from the use of this device. Thus, CCS is considered to be a promising non-invasive tool for further assessing skin diseases in cetaceans, particularly those under human care, without affecting their welfare. Abstract Poxvirus-like lesions are widely used as a potential health indicator in cetaceans, although for this application, corroboration of Poxvirus skin disease is imperative. Aiming to address skin biopsies intrusiveness, a preliminary investigation of a non-invasive skin sampling procedure to molecularly detect CePV-1 in 12 tattoo-like-lesions from two free-ranging stranded cetaceans in the Canary Islands was performed. Skin lesions were brushed with cytology cell samplers (CCSs) and placed into 1.5 mL microcentrifuge tubes with 1 mL of RNAlaterTM Stabilization Solution. For factual comparisons, DNA extractions from sloughed skin obtained with CCS and biopsies from the same lesions were accomplished with DNA Tissue Kit STM (QuickGene, Kurabo, Japan). Moreover, a second DNA extraction from sloughed skin with DNeasyTM Blood and Tissue Kit (Qiagen, Inc., Valencia, CA, USA) was performed to ascertain kit suitability for CCS. Molecular detection of CePV-1 was performed through a real-time PCR. As a result, a 91.7% and 83.3% rates of positivity were obtained with biopsies and CCS through Quickgene, respectively, compared to the rate of 100% using CCS with Qiagen. Accordingly, CCS is a reliable non-invasive sampling device to obtain sufficient genetic material to be analyzed for CePV-1 in tattoo-skin-lesions as well as for other purposes in cetaceans under human care.
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- 2021
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30. Contribution to Herpesvirus Surveillance in Beaked Whales Stranded in the Canary Islands
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Antonio Fernández, Manuel Arbelo, Marisa Andrada, Simone Segura-Göthlin, Ana Colom-Rivero, Eva Sierra, and Idaira Felipe-Jiménez
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Subfamily ,Ziphius cavirostris ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Veterinary medicine ,beaked whale ,Zoology ,DNA polymerase ,Article ,Mesoplodon ,0403 veterinary science ,cetaceans ,03 medical and health sciences ,Beaked whale ,Bidens ,herpesvirus ,Genus ,Alphaherpesvirinae ,SF600-1100 ,Gammaherpesvirinae ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,General Veterinary ,biology ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,PCR ,QL1-991 ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Nested polymerase chain reaction ,alphaherpesvirus - Abstract
Simple Summary Herpesviruses (HVs) are a large family of DNA viruses infecting animals (including insects and mollusks) and humans. Cetaceans can be also infected by HVs presenting different range of lesions, from dermatitis to meningoencephalitis, or being asymptomatic. Several studies have addressed the question of HVs in cetaceans, although no previous systematic survey of HV in beaked whales (BWs) (Ziphiidae family) has been previously performed. The family Ziphiidae, which includes 22 species in 6 genera, is one of the most widespread families of cetaceans, with a strict oceanic habitat pattern. Beaked whales, Cuvier’s BW in particular, are one of the deepest diving whales and are of particular interest because of a notable relationship between military operations employing mid-frequency sonar and the mass stranding of BWs in different geographic areas, including the Canary Islands. In this study, we analyzed 55 BWs (294 samples) stranded in the Canary Islands from 1990 to 2017 by molecular methods (conventional nested polymerase chain reaction). Our results showed that 8 BWs were infected by HVs, although only three animals displayed lesions indicative of active viral replication. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that HV-BW sequences are species-specific, although more studies are needed to better address this question. Abstract Herpesviruses (HVs) (Alpha- and Gammaherpesvirinae subfamilies) have been detected in several species of cetaceans with different pathological implications. However, available information on their presence in beaked whales (BWs) is still scarce. In this study, a total of 55 BWs (35 Ziphius cavirostris and 20 animals belonging to the Mesoplodon genus) were analyzed. Samples (n = 294) were obtained from BWs stranded along the coasts of the Canary Islands (1990–2017). Molecular detection of HV was performed by means of a conventional nested PCR based on the DNA polymerase gene. Herpesvirus was detected in 14.45% (8/55) of the analyzed BWs, including 2 positive animals from a previous survey. A percentage positivity of 8.57% was found within the Cuvier’s BW group, while the percentage of positivity rose to 25% within the Mesoplodon genus group (three M. densirostris, one M. europaeus, and one M. bidens). All the obtained sequences from this study belonged to the Alphaherpesvirinae subfamily, from which three are considered novel sequences, all of them within the Mesoplodon genus group. In addition, to our knowledge, this is the first description of HV infection in Gervais’ and Sowerby’s BWs. Three out of eight HV-positive BWs displayed histopathological lesions indicative of active viral replication.
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- 2021
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31. In Reply to Dr Soteras et al
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Carmen M. Martínez-Caballero and Eva Sierra Quintana
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Emergency Medical Services ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Emergency Medicine ,Emergency medical services ,MEDLINE ,Medicine ,Medical emergency ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2020
32. Neurobrucellosis in a common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) stranded in the Canary Islands
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Antonio Fernández, Gabriella Di Francesco, Manuel Arbelo, Miguel Rivero, Eva Sierra, Simona Sacchini, Idaira Felipe-Jiménez, Josué Díaz-Delgado, and Daniele Zucca
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040301 veterinary sciences ,Case Report ,Canary Islands ,Stenella coeruleoalba ,Brucella ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Brucellosis ,0403 veterinary science ,Lesion ,03 medical and health sciences ,Marine mammal ,Meningoencephalitis ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Animals ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,lcsh:Veterinary medicine ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Bottlenose dolphin ,Brain ,Cetacean Morbillivirus ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Cetacean morbillivirus ,Bottle-Nosed Dolphin ,Spain ,lcsh:SF600-1100 ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Neurobrucellosis ,Meningitis - Abstract
Background Brucella spp. isolation is increasingly reported in cetaceans, although associated pathologies, including lesions of the musculoskeletal and nervous systems, are less frequently described. Concerning the nervous system, Brucella sp. infection causing meningitis, meningoencephalitis or meningoencephalomyelitis have been extensively reported in striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba), and less frequently in other cetacean species. Case presentation A juvenile female common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) was found stranded alive in Lanzarote (Canary Islands, Spain) in 2005, but died shortly after. On physical examination, the dolphin showed a moderate body condition and was classified as code 2 (fresh dead) at the time of necropsy. The main gross findings were severe multiorgan parasitism, thickened and congested leptomeninges, and (sero)fibrino-suppurative and proliferative arthritis of the shoulder joint. Histopathological examination revealed the distinct features of a sub-acute systemic disease associated with Cetacean Morbillivirus (CeMV) infection. However, brain lesions diverged from those reported in systemic CeMV infection. This led to suspect that there was a coinfecting pathogen, based on the characteristics of the inflammatory response and the lesion distribution pattern in the central nervous system. Brucella sp. was detected in the brain tissue by PCR and Brucella antigen was demonstrated by immunohistochemistry in the brain and shoulder joint lesions. Conclusions The zoonotic potential of marine mammal strains of Brucella has been demonstrated both in natural and laboratory conditions. In this study, PCR detected Brucella sp. in the brain of a common bottlenose dolphin stranded in the Canary Islands; the dolphin was also co-infected with CeMV. This is the first detection of Brucella sp. infection in a stranded cetacean in this archipelago. Therefore, we stress the importance of taking adequate measures during the handling of these species to prevent the transmissions of the infection to humans.
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- 2019
33. Epidemiology of Cardiac Events During Prehospital Care in Mountain Rescues Conducted in Aragón
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Carmen M. Martínez-Caballero and Eva Sierra Quintana
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Adult ,Male ,Emergency Medical Services ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute coronary syndrome ,Adolescent ,Heart Diseases ,Cardiovascular risk factors ,Sudden death ,Death, Sudden ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Inferior infarction ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Retrospective cohort study ,030229 sport sciences ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Mountaineering ,Spanish population ,Spain ,Emergency medicine ,Emergency Medicine ,Female ,business - Abstract
Introduction Cardiac events are one of the leading causes of death in the Spanish population. Given the increase in the nontraumatic medical conditions found in mountain rescues, the objective of this study was to report on the heart conditions of patients rescued in the mountains of Aragon in the Spanish Pyrenees. Methods We conducted a retrospective observational study based on data collected from patients' medical histories for rescues undertaken in from 2010 to 2016 (at altitudes between 500 m [1640 ft] and 3404 m [11,168 ft]). Results Of the 2079 individuals rescued from 2010 to 2016, 34 (2%) were diagnosed with heart conditions, accounting for 21% of all nontraumatic medical conditions. The data showed a statistically significant increase in the age of the rescued patients with heart conditions (55±15 y) and those with acute coronary syndrome/sudden death (60±8 y). Eighty-five percent of the rescued patients with heart conditions were men, 62% were rescued above 2000 m (6500 ft), 42% had acute coronary syndrome (of whom 56% had inferior infarction), and 35% died suddenly. Conclusions Aragon mountain rescues show an increase in patient age in recent years. The most common medical case among rescued individuals with heart conditions was a hiker over the age of 50 y with cardiovascular risk factors, inferior infarction, and occurrence at an altitude above 2000 m. Based on our observations, appropriate training should be undertaken, especially by older hikers, who may also benefit from cardiac screening, and rescue vehicles/personnel and mountain huts should be equipped with semiautomatic external defibrillators.
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- 2019
34. Retrospective study of foreign body-associated pathology in stranded cetaceans, Canary Islands (2000–2015)
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Antonio Fernández, Y. Bernaldo de Quirós, Pedro Saavedra, Javier Almunia, Manuel Arbelo, Miguel Rivero, Eva Sierra, Raquel Puig-Lozano, J. de la Fuente, Simona Sacchini, Cristian M. Suárez-Santana, Josué Díaz-Delgado, Daniele Zucca, Nakita Câmara, and Natalia García-Álvarez
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0106 biological sciences ,Dolphins ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Biodiversity ,Zoology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Biology ,Toxicology ,01 natural sciences ,Marine pollution ,Beaked whale ,Sperm whale ,Marine debris ,medicine ,Animals ,Prospective Studies ,Retrospective Studies ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Waste Products ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Whales ,Retrospective cohort study ,Aquatic animal ,General Medicine ,Foreign Bodies ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Pollution ,Europe ,Spain ,Cetacea ,Foreign body ,Plastics ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Marine pollution, overrepresented by plastic, is a growing concern worldwide. However, there is little knowledge on occurrence and detrimental impacts of marine debris in cetaceans. To partially fill in this gap of knowledge, we aimed to investigate the occurrence and pathologies associated with foreign bodies (FBs) in a large cohort of cetaceans (n = 465) stranded in the Canary Islands. The Canary Islands shelter the greatest cetacean biodiversity in Europe, with up to 30 different species, of which nine are regularly present year around. We found at least one ingested FB in 36 out of 465 (7.74%) studied cetaceans, involving 15 different species, including eight out of the nine (80%) cetacean species present year-round in the Canary Islands. Risso's dolphin was the species most affected, followed by sperm whale, beaked whale and mysticetes. Plastic FB were the most common item found (80.56%). FB was directly associated with death in 13/36 (36.11%) animals. Poor body condition and deep diving behavior were found to be risk factors for FB ingestion, whereas the adult age was a protective factor. To the authors knowledge this is the first study that use statistical analysis to investigate risk and protective factors for FB ingestion. This study also provides insights of the potential impact caused by ingested FBs on the animal's health and mortality. This knowledge is critical to better understand and assess the impact of FB in cetaceans setting the scientific basis for prospective impact monitoring and future conservation policies.
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- 2018
35. Altered pain processing in people with type I and II diabetes: a protocol for a systematic review and meta-analysis of pain threshold and pain modulation mechanisms
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Eva Sierra-Silvestre, Michel W. Coppieters, and Leanne Margaret Bisset
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Pain Threshold ,Somatosensory threshold ,medicine.medical_specialty ,MEDLINE ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Pain ,Metabolic disease ,lcsh:Medicine ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,CINAHL ,Cochrane Library ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Diabetic Neuropathies ,Diabetes mellitus ,Polyneuropathy ,Threshold of pain ,medicine ,Protocol ,Humans ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Pain Perception ,Publication bias ,medicine.disease ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Meta-analysis ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Peripheral neuropathies are a common complication in patients with diabetes. Changes in nerve function and central pain processing can be quantified by assessing pain thresholds and pain modulation mechanisms. Aim To summarise the literature which compares pain thresholds and pain modulation mechanisms in people with diabetes without neuropathies, with non-painful diabetic neuropathies and with painful diabetic neuropathies, and in people without diabetes. Methods A systematic review and meta-analysis will be conducted. Terms related to diabetes, pain thresholds and pain modulation mechanisms will be combined in a structured search in MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library, SPORTDiscus, Web of Science and PEDro. Publications on adults (18 years and older) with diabetes and at least one pain threshold measure following thermal, mechanical or electrical stimuli and/or at least one pain modulation mechanisms (temporal summation or conditioned pain modulation) with a comparison group will be considered. There will be no restriction regarding language or year of publication. One investigator will screen records based on title and abstract (ESS). Two independent investigators (ESS and MC) will select full-text papers and assess risk of bias using a modified Downs and Black checklist. Potential disagreements will be resolved with a third investigator (LB). One investigator (ESS) will extract all data and a second investigator (MS) will extract data for 20% of the papers to verify accuracy of the process. A sensitivity analysis for publication bias will be conducted. Discussion This systematic review and meta-analysis will summarise the evidence on pain threshold profiles and pain modulation mechanisms in people with diabetes without and with neuropathies (both painful and non-painful). This will provide more insight in the clinical presentation and progression of diabetic neuropathies. Systematic review registration PROSPERO CRD42018088173 Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s13643-018-0895-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2018
36. Translation into Spanish and validation of a short questionnaire to measure the control of inflammatory bowel disease from the patient's perspective: IBD-Control, EII-Control
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Raquel Vicente Lidón, Santiago García López, Pilar Corsino Roche, José Miguel Boudet Barraca, Patricia Sanz Segura, Paula García Cámara, Eva Sierra Moros, and Fernando Gomollón García
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Surveys and Questionnaires ,Chronic Disease ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases - Abstract
Measurement of patient-perceived outcomes in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) care is becoming increasingly important. A simple and validated tool exists in English for this purpose, the "IBD-Control". Our aim is to translate it into Spanish, adapt and validate it.The IBD-Control was translated into the Spanish instrument "EII-Control" and prospectively validated. Patients completed the EII-Control and other questionnaires that served as baseline comparators. The gastroenterologist performed a global assessment of the disease, calculated activity indices and recorded treatment. A subgroup of patients repeated the entire assessment at a second visit. The usefulness of IBD-Control summary scales (IBD-Control-8 and IBD-Control-VAS) was also analysed.A total of 249 IBD patients were included (101 repeated the second visit). Psychometric standards of the test: internal consistency: Cronbach's α for EII-Control 0.83 with strong correlation between EII-Control-8 and EII-Control-EVA (r=0.5); reproducibility: intra-class correlation 0.70 for EII-Control; construct validity: moderate to strong correlations between IBD-Control, IBD-Control-8 and IBD-Control-VAS versus comparators; discriminant validity: P.001; sensitivity to change: same response as quality of life index. Sensitivity and specificity at cut-off point 14 of 0.696 and 0.903, respectively, to determine quiescent status.The IBD-Control is a valid instrument to measure IBD-Control from the patient's perspective in our environment and culture. Its simplicity makes it a useful tool to support care.
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- 2021
37. Evidence for Unknown Sarcocystis-Like Infection in Stranded Striped Dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba) from the Ligurian Sea, Italy
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Antoinette E. Marsh, Antonio Fernández, Carla Grattarola, Barbara Iulini, Mercedes Fernández-Escobar, Federica Verna, Maria Caramelli, Tania Audino, Eva Sierra, Katia Varello, Cristina Casalone, Paola Gazzuola, Rafael Calero-Bernal, Letizia Marsili, Cristina Esmeralda Di Francesco, Alessandra Pautasso, Maria Goria, Federica Giorda, Enrica Berio, Simone Peletto, and Umberto Romani-Cremaschi
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sanidad animal ,Veterinary medicine ,genotype ,ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species ,Toxoplasma gondii ,Stenella coeruleoalba ,Sarcocystis-like ,neuropathology ,striped dolphin ,tissue cysts ,Article ,Hammondia hammondi ,Coccidia ,biology.animal ,SF600-1100 ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animales salvajes y exóticos ,Genotype ,Neuropathology ,Striped dolphin ,Tissue cysts ,General Veterinary ,biology ,ved/biology ,Meningoencephalitis ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Neospora caninum ,QL1-991 ,Sarcocystidae ,Sarcocystis ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Zoology - Abstract
Simple Summary Two stranded striped dolphins presented meningoenchepalitic lesions associated with the presence of unknown protozoan tissue cysts. The present study aimed at fully characterizing these previously undescribed parasites. Light microscopy re-examination of affected CNS areas showed high numbers of tissue cysts with morphological features resembling those of Sarcocystis species. Tissue cyst bradyzoites positively stained when labeled with polyclonal antisera but cross-reactivity could not be precluded. Sarcocystis sp. sequences with high homology to species infecting livestock were amplified by means of PCR from myocardial and muscle tissues. This is the first report of Sarcocystis-like tissue cysts in the cerebral tissue of stranded cetaceans with muscular sarcocystosis in Mediterranean dolphins. The obtained results may suggest a land-to-sea cycling of Apicomplexan parasites in this region and the need for further investigations in order to foster marine mammal conservation. Abstract Two striped dolphins (SD1, SD2), stranded along the Ligurian coast of Italy, were diagnosed with a nonsuppurative meningoencephalitis associated with previously undescribed protozoan tissue cysts. As tissue cysts were morphologically different from those of Toxoplasma gondii, additional histopathological, immunohistochemical, ultrastructural, and biomolecular investigations were performed, aiming to fully characterize the organism. Histopathology revealed the presence of large Sarcocystis-like tissue cysts, associated with limited inflammatory lesions in all CNS areas studied. IHC was inconclusive, as positive staining with polyclonal antisera did not preclude cross-reaction with other Sarcocystidae coccidia. Applied to each animal, 11 different PCR protocols precluded a neural infection by Sarcocystis neurona, Sarcocystis falcatula, Hammondia hammondi, and Neospora caninum. T. gondii coinfection was confirmed only in dolphin SD2. Sarcocystis sp. sequences, showing the highest homology to species infecting the Bovidae family, were amplified from SD1 myocardium and SD2 skeletal muscle. The present study represents the first report of Sarcocystis-like tissue cysts in the brain of stranded cetaceans along with the first description of Sarcocystis sp. infection in muscle tissue of dolphins from the Mediterranean basin.
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- 2021
38. Myoglobin Concentration and Oxygen Stores in Different Functional Muscle Groups from Three Small Cetacean Species
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Misty Niemeyer, Miguel Rivero, William A. McLellan, Andreas Fahlman, Nakita Câmara, Marina Arregui, Pedro Saavedra, Yara Bernaldo de Quiros, Emily M. Singleton, D. Ann Pabst, Michael J. Moore, and Eva Sierra
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chemistry.chemical_element ,Stenella coeruleoalba ,Muscle mass ,Oxygen ,S. coeruleoalba ,Article ,D. delphis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,biology.animal ,lcsh:Zoology ,Respiration ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,S. frontalis ,lcsh:Veterinary medicine ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Chemistry ,Fish fin ,Anatomy ,Stenella ,aerobic dive limit ,Myoglobin ,Single muscle ,muscle mass ,lcsh:SF600-1100 ,Animal Science and Zoology ,heterogeneity - Abstract
Compared with terrestrial mammals, marine mammals possess increased muscle myoglobin concentrations (Mb concentration, g Mb · 100g−1 muscle), enhancing their onboard oxygen (O2) stores and their aerobic dive limit. Although myoglobin is not homogeneously distributed, cetacean muscle O2 stores have been often determined by measuring Mb concentration from a single muscle sample (longissimus dorsi) and multiplying that value by the animal’s locomotor muscle or total muscle mass. This study serves to determine the accuracy of previous cetacean muscle O2 stores calculations. For that, body muscles from three delphinid species: Delphinus delphis, Stenella coeruleoalba, and Stenella frontalis, were dissected and weighed. Mb concentration was calculated from six muscles/muscle groups (epaxial, hypaxial and rectus abdominis, mastohumeralis, sternohyoideus, and dorsal scalenus), each representative of different functional groups (locomotion powering swimming, pectoral fin movement, feeding and respiration, respectively). Results demonstrated that the Mb concentration was heterogeneously distributed, being significantly higher in locomotor muscles. Locomotor muscles were the major contributors to total muscle O2 stores (mean 92.8%) due to their high Mb concentration and large muscle masses. Compared to this method, previous studies assuming homogenous Mb concentration distribution likely underestimated total muscle O2 stores by 10% when only considering locomotor muscles and overestimated them by 13% when total muscle mass was considered.
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- 2021
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39. Systematic determination of herpesvirus in free-ranging cetaceans stranded in the Western Mediterranean : tissue tropism and associated lesions
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Antonio Fernández, Eva Sierra, María Ángeles Jiménez, Manuel Arbelo, Daniel García-Párraga, José Manuel Sánchez-Vizcaíno, Ignacio Vargas-Castro, Mar Melero, José Luis Crespo-Picazo, Consuelo Rubio-Guerri, Producción Científica UCH 2021, and UCH. Departamento de Farmacia
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Central Nervous System ,viruses ,Alphaherpesvirinae ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Delfines - Enfermedades ,Morbillivirus ,Dolphins - Diseases ,Gammaherpesvirinae ,Herpesviridae ,Phylogeny ,gammaherpesvirus ,biology ,Coinfection ,dolphin ,virus diseases ,Viral tegument ,Herpesviridae Infections ,QR1-502 ,Cetacean morbillivirus ,Caniformia ,Infectious Diseases ,Female ,CNS ,Morbillivirus Infections ,alphaherpesvirus ,mRNA ,marine mammal ,Mamíferos marinos - Enfermedades ,Microbiology ,Tropism ,Virus ,Article ,herpesvirus ,Virology ,medicine ,Animals ,Herpesvirus diseases ,latency ,Marine mammals - Diseases ,Enfermedades por herpesvirus ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,morbillivirus ,Spain ,Tissue tropism ,Cattle ,Cetacea - Abstract
Este artículo se encuentra disponible en la siguiente URL: https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4915/13/11/2180 En este artículo de investigación también participan: Manuel Arbelo, Antonio Fernández, Daniel García-Párraga y José Manuel Sánchez-Vizcaíno. Este artículo pertenece al número especial "Ecology of Virus Emergence from Wildilfe". The monitoring of herpesvirus infection provides useful information when assessing marine mammals’ health. This paper shows the prevalence of herpesvirus infection (80.85%) in 47 cetaceans stranded on the coast of the Valencian Community, Spain. Of the 966 tissues evaluated, 121 tested positive when employing nested-PCR (12.53%). The largest proportion of herpesvirus-positive tissue samples was in the reproductive system, nervous system, and tegument. Herpesvirus was more prevalent in females, juveniles, and calves. More than half the DNA PCR positive tissues contained herpesvirus RNA, indicating the presence of actively replicating virus. This RNA was most frequently found in neonates. Fourteen unique sequences were identified. Most amplified sequences belonged to the Gammaherpesvirinae subfamily, but a greater variation was found in Alphaherpesvirinae sequences. This is the first report of systematic herpesvirus DNA and RNA determination in freeranging cetaceans. Nine (19.14%) were infected with cetacean morbillivirus and all of them (100%) were coinfected with herpesvirus. Lesions similar to those caused by herpesvirus in other species were observed, mainly in the skin, upper digestive tract, genitalia, and central nervous system. Other lesions were also attributable to concomitant etiologies or were nonspecific. It is necessary to investigate the possible role of herpesvirus infection in those cases.
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- 2021
40. Amyloid-beta peptide and phosphorylated tau in the frontopolar cerebral cortex and in the cerebellum of toothed whales: aging versus hypoxia
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Simona Sacchini, Yara Bernaldo de Quirós, Josué Díaz-Delgado, Y. Paz, Antonio Fernández, Pedro Herráez, Antonio Espinosa de los Monteros, Eva Sierra, and Manuel Arbelo
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Aging ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cerebellum ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Amyloid beta ,QH301-705.5 ,beta amyloid ,Science ,tau Proteins ,Biology ,phosphorylated tau ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Tangle ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immunolabeling ,medicine ,Animals ,Phosphorylation ,Biology (General) ,beaked whales ,030304 developmental biology ,toothed whales ,Cerebral Cortex ,Neurons ,0303 health sciences ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,hypoxia ,Whales ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Hypoxia (medical) ,Immunohistochemistry ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cerebral cortex ,Cerebellar cortex ,Nerve Degeneration ,biology.protein ,medicine.symptom ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Biomarkers ,Research Article - Abstract
Hypoxia could be a possible risk factor for neurodegenerative alterations in cetaceans’ brain. Among toothed whales, the beaked whales are particularly cryptic and routinely dive deeper than 1000 m for about 1 h in order to hunt squids and fishes. Samples of frontal cerebral and cerebellar cortex were collected from nine animals, representing six different species of the suborder Odontoceti. Immunohistochemical analysis employed anti-β-amyloid (Aβ) and anti-neurofibrillary tangle (NFT) antibodies. Six of nine (67%) animals showed positive immunolabeling for Aβ and/or NFT. The most striking findings were intranuclear Aβ immunopositivity in cerebral cortical neurons and NFT immunopositivity in cerebellar Purkinje neurons with granulovacuolar degeneration. Aβ plaques were also observed in one elderly animal. Herein, we present immunohistopathological findings classic of Alzheimer's and other neurodegenerative diseases in humans. Our findings could be linked to hypoxic phenomena, as they were more extensive in beaked whales. Despite their adaptations, cetaceans could be vulnerable to sustained and repetitive brain hypoxia., Summary: Immunohistochemical analysis showed positive immunolabeling for amyloid-beta peptide and phosphorylated tau in the cerebral and cerebellar cortex of toothed whales. These findings could be linked to hypoxic phenomena.
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- 2020
41. Retrospective Study of Fishery Interactions in Stranded Cetaceans, Canary Islands
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Raquel Puig-Lozano, Antonio Fernández, Eva Sierra, Pedro Saavedra, Cristian M. Suárez-Santana, Jesús De la Fuente, Josué Díaz-Delgado, Ana Godinho, Natalia García-Álvarez, Daniele Zucca, Aina Xuriach, Marina Arregui, Idaira Felipe-Jiménez, Francesco Consoli, Pablo J. Díaz-Santana, Simone Segura-Göthlin, Nakita Câmara, Miguel A. Rivero, Simona Sacchini, Yara Bernaldo de Quirós, and Manuel Arbelo
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040301 veterinary sciences ,Atlantic spotted dolphin ,Biology ,bycatch ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,peracute underwater entrapment ,biology.animal ,Spotted Dolphin ,Minke whale ,14. Life underwater ,030304 developmental biology ,Original Research ,0303 health sciences ,lcsh:Veterinary medicine ,Balaenoptera ,General Veterinary ,Whale ,minke whale ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Bryde's whale ,biology.organism_classification ,Stenella ,Fishery ,Bycatch ,longline hooks ,lcsh:SF600-1100 ,Veterinary Science ,fisherman aggressions ,entanglement ,Body condition - Abstract
Estimating cetacean interactions with fishery activities is challenging. Bycatch and chronic entanglements are responsible for thousands of cetacean deaths per year globally. This study represents the first systematic approach to the postmortem investigation of fishery interactions in stranded cetaceans in the Canary Islands. We retrospectively studied 586 cases necropsied between January 2000 and December 2018. Of the cases with a known cause of death, 7.4% (32/453) were due to fishery interactions, and the Atlantic spotted dolphin (Stenella frontalis) was the most affected species [46.9% (15/32)]. Three types of fishery interactions were recognized by gross findings: bycatch [65.6% (21/32)], chronic entanglements [18.8% (6/32)], and fishermen aggression [15.6% (5/32)]. Among the bycaught cases, we differentiated the dolphins that died because of ingestion of longline hooks [23.8% (5/21)] from those that died because of fishing net entrapments [76.2% (16/21)], including dolphins that presumably died at depth due to peracute underwater entrapment (PUE) [37.5% (6/16)], dolphins that were hauled out alive and suffered additional trauma during handling [43.8% (7/16)], and those that were released alive but became stranded and died because of fishery interactions [18.7% (3/16)]. Gross and histologic findings of animals in each group were presented and compared. The histological approach confirmed gross lesions and excluded other possible causes of death. Cetaceans in good-fair body condition and shallow diving species were significantly more affected by fishery interactions, in agreement with the literature. Low rates of fishery interactions have been described, compared with other regions. However, within the last few years, sightings of entangled live whales, especially the minke whale (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) and Bryde's whale (B. edeni), have increased. This study contributes to further improvement of the evaluation of different types of fishery interactions and may facilitate the enforcement of future conservation policies to preserve cetacean populations in the Canary Islands.
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- 2020
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42. Histopathological Differential Diagnosis of Meningoencephalitis in Cetaceans: Morbillivirus, Herpesvirus, Toxoplasma gondii, Brucella sp., and Nasitrema sp
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Antonio Fernández, Daniele Zucca, Nakita Câmara, Raquel Puig-Lozano, Cristian M. Suárez-Santana, Eva Sierra, Idaira Felipe-Jiménez, Francesco Consoli, Manuel Arbelo, Josué Díaz-Delgado, and Pablo J Díaz-Santana
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Nasitrema sp ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Toxoplasma gondii ,Myelitis ,cetaceans ,herpesvirus ,Morbillivirus ,medicine ,Fibrinoid necrosis ,Brucella sp ,Original Research ,lcsh:Veterinary medicine ,General Veterinary ,biology ,meningoencephalitis ,Meningoencephalitis ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Cetacean morbillivirus ,morbillivirus ,lcsh:SF600-1100 ,Veterinary Science ,Meningitis ,Encephalitis - Abstract
Infectious and inflammatory processes are among the most common causes of central nervous system involvement in stranded cetaceans. Meningitis and encephalitis are among the leading known natural causes of death in stranded cetaceans and may be caused by a wide range of pathogens. This study describes histopathological findings in post-mortem brain tissue specimens from stranded cetaceans associated with five relevant infectious agents: viruses [Cetacean Morbillivirus (CeMV) and Herpesvirus (HV); n = 29], bacteria (Brucella sp.; n = 7), protozoa (Toxoplasma gondii; n = 6), and helminths (Nasitrema sp.; n = 1). Aetiological diagnosis was established by molecular methods. Histopathologic evaluations of brain samples were performed in all the cases, and additional histochemical and/or immunohistochemical stains were carried out accordingly. Compared with those produced by other types of pathogens in our study, the characteristic features of viral meningoencephalitis (CeMV and HV) included the most severe and frequent presence of malacia, intranuclear, and/or intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies, neuronal necrosis and associated neuronophagia, syncytia and hemorrhages, predominantly in the cerebrum. The characteristic features of Brucella sp. meningoencephalitis included the most severe and frequent presence of meningitis, perivascular cuffing, cerebellitis, myelitis, polyradiculoneuritis, choroiditis, ventriculitis, vasculitis, and fibrinoid necrosis of vessels. The characteristic features of T. gondii meningoencephalitis included lymphocytic and granulomatous encephalitis, tissue cysts, microgliosis, and oedema. In the case of Nasitrema sp. infection, lesions are all that we describe since just one animal was available. The results of this study are expected to contribute, to a large extent, to a better understanding of brain-pathogen-associated lesions in cetaceans.
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- 2020
43. A novel real-time PCR to detect Cetacean morbillivirus in Atlantic cetaceans
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Eva Sierra, Cíntia Maria Favero, Kátia R. Groch, Antonio Fernández, Josué Díaz-Delgado, Paulo Eduardo Brandão, José Luiz Catão-Dias, and Sueli Akemi Taniwaki
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0301 basic medicine ,Sotalia guianensis ,030106 microbiology ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Morbillivirus ,Virology ,medicine ,Animals ,Epizootic ,biology ,Molecular epidemiology ,Outbreak ,Reproducibility of Results ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Cetacean morbillivirus ,Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction ,030104 developmental biology ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,VIROSES EM ANIMAIS ,Cetacea ,Brazil ,Morbillivirus Infections - Abstract
Cetacean morbillivirus (CeMV, family Paramyxoviridae) is a re-emergent pathogen associated with severe epizootic outbreaks causing high mortality among cetaceans worldwide. Recently, CeMV caused an unusual mortality event of Guiana dolphins (Sotalia guianensis) in Brazil. Partial sequence of the viral phosphoprotein (P) gene showed that the Guiana dolphin morbillivirus (GDMV) might represent a new lineage of CeMV. This study aimed to develop a molecular technique to detect the most common CeMV strains known to circulate in the Atlantic Ocean: GDMV, Dolphin morbillivirus (DMV) and Pilot-whale morbillivirus (PWMV). A sensible real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) method based on intercalating dye, targeting the P gene was described. This assay successfully detected GDMV, PWMV and DMV from field samples. Its performance was compared to a RT-qPCR method that specifically detects GDMV. Both assays had high sensibility and excellent intra- and inter-assay reproducibility. A total of 109 field samples from 32 Guiana dolphins were screened for CeMV by conventional RT-PCR in parallel with the RT-qPCR assay. The detection rate increased from 32% to 60% by use of the novel RT-qPCR. The RT-qPCR assay described herein allows rapid and sensitive detection of Atlantic CeMV strains, and is potentially suitable for screening of CeMV globally.
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- 2020
44. Altered pain processing in patients with type 1 and 2 diabetes: systematic review and meta-analysis of pain detection thresholds and pain modulation mechanisms
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Michel W. Coppieters, Mari Somerville, Eva Sierra-Silvestre, and Leanne Margaret Bisset
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Pain Threshold ,diabetic neuropathies ,Diabetic neuropathy ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Pain ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Nerve fiber ,Summation ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Humans ,Pathophysiology/Complications ,business.industry ,Chronic pain ,diabetes complications ,Pain detection ,medicine.disease ,RC648-665 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Strictly standardized mean difference ,Meta-analysis ,Anesthesia ,business ,chronic pain ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The first signs of diabetic neuropathy typically result from small-diameter nerve fiber dysfunction. This review synthesized the evidence for small-diameter nerve fiber neuropathy measured via quantitative sensory testing (QST) in patients with diabetes with and without painful and non-painful neuropathies. Electronic databases were searched to identify studies in patients with diabetes with at least one QST measure reflecting small-diameter nerve fiber function (thermal or electrical pain detection threshold, contact heat-evoked potentials, temporal summation or conditioned pain modulation). Four groups were compared: patients with diabetes (1) without neuropathy, (2) with non-painful diabetic neuropathy, (3) with painful diabetic neuropathy and (4) healthy individuals. Recommended methods were used for article identification, selection, risk of bias assessment, data extraction and analysis. For the meta-analyses, data were pooled using random-effect models. Twenty-seven studies with 2422 participants met selection criteria; 18 studies were included in the meta-analysis. Patients with diabetes without symptoms of neuropathy already showed loss of nerve function for heat (standardized mean difference (SMD): 0.52, p
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- 2020
45. Amyloid-beta peptide and phosphorylated tau in the frontopolar cerebral cortex and in the cerebellum of toothed whales: aging vs hypoxia
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Simona Sacchini, Josué Díaz, Antonio Espinosa de los Monteros, Yania Paz, Yara Bernaldo de Quirós, Eva Sierra, Manuel Arbelo, Pedro Herráez, and Antonio Fernández
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Background: Alzheimer’s disease results from the interplay of multiple risk factors and their effects. Diving mammals may be routinely exposed to severe hypoxia when submerged. Among toothed whales, the beaked whales are particularly cryptic and routinely dive deeper than 1,000 m for about one hour in order to hunt deep-water squid and fish. We hypothesized that hypoxia could be a possible risk factor for neurodegenerative alterations in the central nervous system of beaked whales in particular, and toothed whales in general. Results: Samples of frontal cerebral cortex and cerebellum were collected from nine animals, representing six different species of the suborder Odontoceti. Immunohistochemical analysis employed a monoclonal anti-β-amyloid (Aβ) and a polyclonal anti-neurofibrillary tangle (NFT) antibodies. Six of nine (67%) animals showed positive immunolabeling for Aβ and/or NFT. The most striking findings were intranuclear Aβ immunopositivity in cerebral cortical neurons and NFT immunopositivity in cerebellar Purkinje neurons with granulovacuolar degeneration. Herein, we present immunohistopathological findings classic of Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases in humans, in different brain locales of odontocete cetaceans. This study represents the first description of Aβ and NFT in the brain of beaked whales, adding also to the non-existent descriptions of GVD in the brain of non-experimental animals, being specifically the first report of granulovacuolar degeneration in the cerebellum. Our results further confirm the rarely reported intranuclear expression of Aβ. Conclusions: These findings could be linked to hypoxic phenomena, as they were more extensive in the brains of beaked whales, and not only in aged individuals. Therefore, a novel hypothesis linking hypoxia and neurodegeneration microscopic hallmarks in cetaceans is proposed. Despite their adaptations, diving mammals could be vulnerable to sustained and repetitive brain hypoxia. Future comparative pathological and neuroprotective investigations may prove of great value to Alzheimer’s disease and other neurodegenerative diseases in humans.
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- 2020
46. Capture Myopathy and Stress Cardiomyopathy in a Live-Stranded Risso’s Dolphin (Grampus griseus) in Rehabilitation
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Manuel Arbelo, Marina Arregui, Antonio Fernández, Nakita Câmara, Yara Bernaldo de Quirós, Pedro Herráez, Eva Sierra, and Francesco Consoli
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medicine.medical_specialty ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Cardiomyopathy ,Physiology ,Case Report ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,animal welfare ,0403 veterinary science ,cetaceans ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,lcsh:Zoology ,medicine ,Juvenile ,biochemistry ,Grampus griseus ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,Blood urea nitrogen ,lcsh:Veterinary medicine ,General Veterinary ,biology ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,animal conservation ,immunohistochemistry ,biology.protein ,histopathology ,lcsh:SF600-1100 ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Creatine kinase ,Histopathology ,Metabolic syndrome ,Human Pathology - Abstract
Simple Summary Free-living cetaceans are threatened, daily, by a wide variety of stressful situations. An example is provided by live-stranding, in which a cetacean is alive on the beach or in shallow water, and unable to free itself and resume its normal activity. This is the first case of capture myopathy and stress cardiomyopathy in a live-stranded juvenile male Risso’s dolphin (Grampus griseus) with subsequent rehabilitation attempted. Valuable use of blood samples, and finally necropsy assessments, advances our understanding about the pathology common in live-stranded cetaceans. Abstract Capture myopathy (CM) is described in wild animals as a metabolic syndrome resulting from the extreme stress suffered during and after capture, handling, restraint, and transport. Although CM has been characterized in many species of cetaceans, descriptions of cardiac injury—an important component of this syndrome, and, according to previous authors, comparable to the existing human pathology so-called stress cardiomyopathy (SCMP)—are still rare. Therefore, the main aim of this report is to illustrate, for the first time, the biochemical analysis, and gross, histopathological, histochemical and immunohistochemical features of CM, and more specifically of the SCMP involved in this syndrome, caused by the live-stranding and consequent rehabilitation attempt, for a certain period of time, in a juvenile male Risso’s dolphin (Grampus griseus). The animal presented elevated values of creatine kinase, cardiac troponin I and blood urea nitrogen, with some variations during the rehabilitation period. Histologically, we detected vascular changes and acute degenerative lesions analogous to the ones observed in humans with SCMP. We consider this study to be an important contribution to the study of cetaceans since it could help in decision-making and treatment procedures during live-strandings and improve conservation efforts by reducing the mortality of these animals.
- Published
- 2020
47. Immunohistochemical investigations on Brucella ceti-infected, neurobrucellosis-affected striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba)
- Author
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Gabriella, Di Francesco, Antonio, Petrini, Anna Rita, D'Angelo, Ludovica, Di Renzo, Mirella, Luciani, Tiziana, Di Febo, Enzo, Ruggieri, Antonio, Petrella, Carla, Grattarola, Barbara, Iulini, Osvaldo, Matteucci, Giuseppe, Lucifora, Eva, Sierra, Antonio, Fernández, Roberto, Giacominelli Stuffler, Clotilde, Angelucci, Marina, Baffoni, Giovanni, Di Guardo, and Manuela, Tittarelli
- Subjects
Central Nervous System ,Monoclonal antibody ,Brain Diseases ,lcsh:Veterinary medicine ,Brucella ,Immunohistochemistry ,Brucellosis ,Brucella ceti ,Stenella ,Brucella ceti, Immunohistochemistry, Monoclonal antibody, Neurobrucellosis, Stenella coeruleoalba ,Spain ,Stenella coeruleoalba ,Animals ,lcsh:SF600-1100 ,lcsh:Animal culture ,Neurobrucellosis ,lcsh:SF1-1100 - Abstract
Bacteria of the genus Brucella cause brucellosis, an infectious disease common to humans as well as to terrestrial and aquatic mammals. Since 1994 several cases of Brucella spp. infection have been reported in marine mammals worldwide. While sero-epidemiological data suggest that Brucella spp. infection is widespread globally, detecting Brucella spp.-associated antigens by immunohistochemistry (IHC) in tissues from infected animals is often troublesome. The present study was aimed at investigating, by means of IHC based upon the utilization of an anti-Brucella LPS monoclonal antibody (MAb), the central nervous system (CNS) immunoreactivity shown by B. ceti-infected, neurobrucellosis-affected striped dolphins. The aforementioned MAb, previously characterized by means of ELISA and Western Blotting techniques, was able to immunohistochemically detect smooth brucellae both within the CNS from B. ceti-infected striped dolphins and within a range of tissues from Brucella spp.-infected domestic ruminants. In conclusion, the results of the present study are of relevance both from the B. ceti infection's diagnostic and pathogenetic standpoints.
- Published
- 2020
48. Pulmonary and Systemic Skeletal Muscle Embolism in a Beaked Whale with a Massive Trauma of Unknown Aetiology
- Author
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Eva Sierra, Tania Ramírez, Yara Bernaldo de Quirós, Marina Arregui, Blanca Mompeó, Miguel A. Rivero, and Antonio Fernández
- Subjects
General Veterinary ,Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
An adult female Sowerby’s beaked whale was found floating dead in Hermigua (La Gomera, Canary Islands, Spain) on 7 December 2016. Severe traumas of unknown aetiology were attributed, and the gross and microscopic findings are consistent with catastrophic trauma as a cause of death. Rib fractures affected the intercostals, transverse thoracis skeletal muscles, and thoracic rete mirabile. Degenerated muscle fibres were extruded to flow into vascular and lymphatic vessels travelling to several anatomic locations into the thoracic cavity, including the lungs, where they occluded the small lumen of pulmonary microvasculature. A pulmonary and systemic skeletal muscle embolism was diagnosed, constituting the first description of this kind of embolism in an animal. The only previous description has been reported in a woman after peritoneal dialysis. Skeletal pulmonary embolism should be considered a valuable diagnostic for different types of trauma in vivo in wild animals. This is especially valuable when working with decomposed carcasses, as in those cases, it is not always feasible to assess other traumatic evidence.
- Published
- 2022
49. Neuropathological Characterization of Dolphin Morbillivirus Infection in Cetaceans Stranded in Italy
- Author
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Federica Giorda, Paola Crociara, Barbara Iulini, Paola Gazzuola, Alessandra Favole, Maria Goria, Laura Serracca, Alessandro Dondo, Maria Crescio, Tania Audino, Simone Peletto, Cristina Di Francesco, Maria Caramelli, Eva Sierra, Fabio Di Nocera, Giuseppe Lucifora, Antonio Petrella, Roberto Puleio, Sandro Mazzariol, Giovanni Di Guardo, Cristina Casalone, and Carla Grattarola
- Subjects
cetacean morbillivirus ,cetaceans ,meningoencephalitis ,demyelination ,neuropathology ,immunofluorescence ,Cetaceans ,General Veterinary ,Meningoencephalitis ,Cetacean morbillivirus ,Demyelination ,Immunofluorescence ,Neuropathology ,Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
Cetacean morbillivirus (CeMV) is responsible for epidemic and endemic fatalities in free-ranging cetaceans. Neuro-inflammation sustained by CeMV is a leading cause of death in stranded cetaceans. A novel dolphin morbillivirus (DMV) strain of Atlantic origin circulating in Italian waters since early 2016 has caused acute/subacute lesions associated with positive immunolabelling of the virus. To date, myelin damage has not been fully documented and investigated in cetaceans. This study describes neuropathological findings in the brain tissue of 31 cetaceans found stranded along the Italian coastline and positive for DMV infection on molecular testing. Cell changes in the areas of myelinopathy were revealed by double indirect immunofluorescence. The most frequent DMV-associated lesions were astro-microgliosis, neuronal necrosis, spongiosis, malacia, and non-suppurative meningoencephalitis. Myelin reduction and areas of demyelination were revealed by means of a specific myelin biomarker. Morbilliviral antigen immunolabelling was mainly observed in neurons and microglial cells, in association with a marked activation of microglia and astrocytes. These findings extend our knowledge of DMV-associated brain lesions and shed light on their pathogenesis.
- Published
- 2022
50. Methodology and Neuromarkers for Cetaceans’ Brains
- Author
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Simona Sacchini, Pedro Herráez, Manuel Arbelo, Antonio Espinosa de los Monteros, Eva Sierra, Miguel Rivero, Cristiano Bombardi, and Antonio Fernández
- Subjects
General Veterinary - Abstract
Cetacean brain sampling may be an arduous task due to the difficulty of collecting and histologically preparing such rare and large specimens. Thus, one of the main challenges of working with cetaceans’ brains is to establish a valid methodology for an optimal manipulation and fixation of the brain tissue, which allows the samples to be viable for neuroanatomical and neuropathological studies. With this in view, we validated a methodology in order to preserve the quality of such large brains (neuroanatomy/neuropathology) and at the same time to obtain fresh brain samples for toxicological, virological, and microbiological analysis (neuropathology). A fixation protocol adapted to brains, of equal or even three times the size of human brains, was studied and tested. Finally, we investigated the usefulness of a panel of 20 antibodies (neuromarkers) associated with the normal structure and function of the brain, pathogens, age-related, and/or functional variations. The sampling protocol and some of the 20 neuromarkers have been thought to explore neurodegenerative diseases in these long-lived animals. To conclude, many of the typical measures used to evaluate neuropathological changes do not tell us if meaningful cellular changes have occurred. Having a wide panel of antibodies and histochemical techniques available allows for delving into the specific behavior of the neuronal population of the brain nuclei and to get a “fingerprint” of their real status.
- Published
- 2022
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