83 results on '"J F, Prescott"'
Search Results
2. Veterinary antimicrobial stewardship in North America
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J. F. Prescott
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Veterinary Medicine ,Canada ,Veterinary medicine ,Livestock ,General Veterinary ,Specialty ,General Medicine ,Poultry ,United States ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Antimicrobial Stewardship ,One Health ,Animals ,Antimicrobial stewardship ,Stewardship ,Business ,Animal Husbandry ,Medical prescription ,Federal state - Abstract
Major changes are occurring in veterinary antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) in food animals in Canada and the USA. Advances have been ending the use of medically important antimicrobials (MIAs) as growth promoters and bringing all MIAs for food animals under veterinary prescription in Canada (2018) or MIAs in feed or water under veterinary prescription (2017) in the USA. The USA proposes bringing all MIAs for food and companion animals under veterinary oversight, to reduce the duration of preventive use for food animals and to develop a strategy for companion animals. Both countries are taking a 'One Health' approach as part of their national strategies on addressing AMS. Federal state or province jurisdictional issues have impeded development and implementation of regulation-based stewardship approaches. Veterinary regulatory bodies in some of the larger states and provinces are active in AMS. Both the American and Canadian veterinary medical associations are independently heavily engaged in promoting AMS, as are, variably, the different veterinary 'specialty' groups. Regulatory changes and market demand are markedly reducing the use of antimicrobials in food animals. The promotion of veterinary AMS is happening at an increasing pace.
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- 2019
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3. Acquisition of Resistance to Extended-Spectrum Cephalosporins by Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica Serovar Newport and Escherichia coli in the Turkey Poult Intestinal Tract
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Laura Martín, Patrick Boerlin, C. Poppe, Carlton L. Gyles, Scott A. McEwen, Richard J. Reid-Smith, K. R. Forward, and J. F. Prescott
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Serotype ,Turkeys ,Salmonella ,Public Health Microbiology ,Drug resistance ,medicine.disease_cause ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Microbiology ,Transformation, Genetic ,Plasmid ,Escherichia coli ,medicine ,Animals ,Serotyping ,Cephalosporin Resistance ,Ecology ,biology ,Salmonella enterica ,biology.organism_classification ,Enterobacteriaceae ,Virology ,Cephalosporins ,Intestines ,Genes, Bacterial ,Conjugation, Genetic ,Food Microbiology ,Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica ,Plasmids ,Food Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Newport resistant to the extended-spectrum cephalosporins (ESCs) and other antimicrobials causes septicemic salmonellosis in humans and animals and is increasingly isolated from humans, animals, foods, and environmental sources. Mechanisms whereby serovar Newport bacteria become resistant to ESCs and other classes of antimicrobials while inhabiting the intestinal tract are not well understood. The present study shows that 25.3% of serovar Newport strains isolated from the turkey poult intestinal tract after the animals were dosed with Escherichia coli harboring a large conjugative plasmid encoding the CMY-2 β-lactamase and other drug resistance determinants acquired the plasmid and its associated drug resistance genes. The conjugative plasmid containing the cmy-2 gene was transferred not only from the donor E. coli to Salmonella serovar Newport but also to another E. coli serotype present in the intestinal tract. Laboratory studies showed that the plasmid could be readily transferred between serovar Newport and E. coli intestinal isolates. Administration of a single dose of ceftiofur, used to prevent septicemic colibacillosis, to 1-day-old turkeys did not result in the isolation of ceftiofur-resistant E. coli or Salmonella serovar Newport. There was a remarkable association between serotype, drug resistance, and plasmid profile among the E. coli strains isolated from the poults. This study shows that Salmonella serovar Newport can become resistant to ESCs and other antibiotics by acquiring a conjugative drug resistance plasmid from E. coli in the intestines.
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- 2005
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4. Rhodococcus equi research 2008-2012: report of the Fifth International Havemeyer Workshop
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S, Cauchard, S, Giguère, M, Venner, G, Muscatello, J, Cauchard, N D, Cohen, A, Haas, S A, Hines, M K, Hondalus, D W, Horohov, W G, Meijer, J F, Prescott, and J, Vázquez-Boland
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Virulence ,Rhodococcus equi ,Pneumonia, Bacterial ,Animals ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,Actinomycetales Infections - Published
- 2013
5. Rhodococcus Equi
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J F, Prescott and A M, Hoffman
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0403 veterinary science ,0303 health sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Rhodococcus equi ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Equine ,Animals ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Actinomycetales Infections ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
This article summarizes recent advances in understanding of the epidemiology, pathogenesis, clinical and laboratory diagnosis, immunology, treatment, and control of Rhodococcus equi infections in foals. Our understanding of these aspects currently is sufficient to ensure control of this problem on affected farms and in infected foals. More information, however, is needed on factors predisposing foals to R. equi pneumonia, in particular, the nature of the naturally occurring cellular immunodeficiency in foals of 2 to 4 months of age, which also predisposes them to severe respiratory infection with certain other intracellular pathogens. In addition, the relative importance of R. equi pneumonia in the context of other causes of lower respiratory tract infection of foals needs to be defined.
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- 1993
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6. Assessment of laboratory and biosafety practices associated with bacterial culture in veterinary clinics
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J. S. Weese and J. F. Prescott
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Quality Control ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Veterinary medicine ,Microbiological culture ,Veterinary clinics ,Colony Count, Microbial ,Antimicrobial susceptibility ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Biosafety ,Hospitals, Animal ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Drug Resistance, Bacterial ,Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Diagnostic laboratory ,Prospective Studies ,Antiinfective agent ,Bacteriological Techniques ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,Clinical Laboratory Techniques ,Continuing education ,Laboratory Infection ,Family medicine ,business - Abstract
Objective—To investigate bacterial culture practices in veterinary clinics, with an emphasis on laboratory biosafety and on quality of laboratory practices. Design—Survey-based prospective study. Sample Population—166 veterinarians. Procedures—Veterinarians were recruited through the Veterinary Information Network (an Internet-based network restricted to veterinary personnel). All Network-registered veterinarians were eligible to participate. A standardized questionnaire regarding bacterial culture practices in veterinary clinics was completed electronically by study participants. Results—720 veterinarians completed the survey; 166 (23%) indicated that bacterial culture was performed in his or her clinic. Clinic practices ranged from preliminary aerobic bacterial culture only with submission of isolates to a diagnostic laboratory for further testing (93/160 [58%]) to bacterial culture, identification, and antimicrobial susceptibility testing (19/160 [12%]). Most commonly, urine samples were cultured (151/162 [93%] clinics). Several prob-lematic practices were identified regarding quality and quality control, including inadequate facilities, equipment, supervision, interpretation of data, and culture methods. Biosafety infractions were also common, including inadequate laboratory location, lack of biosafety protocols, and dangerous disposal practices. Ninety-four percent of respondents stated that continuing education regarding culture practices and laboratory safety would be useful. Conclusions and Clinical Relevance—Data confirmed that bacterial culture was commonly performed in clinics, but that major deficiencies in laboratory methods were widespread. These could result in negative effects on testing quality and increased risk of laboratory-acquired infections among clinic personnel. Veterinary practices in which bacterial cultures are performed must ensure that adequate equipment, facilities, personnel, and training are provided to enable accurate and safe sample testing.
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- 2009
7. Leptospirosis in the family dog: a public health perspective
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J F Prescott and Kenneth W. G. Brown
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Veterinary medicine ,Canada ,Disease Vectors ,Dogs ,Patient Education as Topic ,Leptospira ,Environmental health ,Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Leptospirosis ,Dog Diseases ,health care economics and organizations ,Practice ,biology ,business.industry ,Transmission (medicine) ,Public health ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Animals, Domestic ,Public Health ,business - Abstract
In North America, there is a low incidence of leptospirosis that occurs as a result of direct transmission of the bacterium from dogs to its owners and their families. It is not mandatory for leptospirosis to be reported to health authorities in Canada, thus it is likely underreported. It is
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- 2008
8. Themes in Bacterial Pathogenic Mechanisms
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C. L. Gyles and and J. F. Prescott
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medicine ,Pathogenic bacteria ,Latency (engineering) ,Biology ,Commensalism ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology - Published
- 2008
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9. Rhodococcus
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C. Dupont, J. F. Prescott, and J. Ren and
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Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Rhodococcus ,Microbiology - Published
- 2008
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10. Progressive panophthalmitis in chinook salmon, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha (Walbaum): a case report
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B. P. Wilcock, S. Backman, J. F. Prescott, and H. W. Ferguson
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Chinook wind ,biology ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Outbreak ,Spleen ,Anatomy ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Microbiology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Mycobacterium neoaurum ,medicine ,Oncorhynchus ,%22">Fish ,Panophthalmitis ,Tropism - Abstract
This report describes the gross and histopathological appearance as well as the bacteriological findings in an outbreak of panophthalmitis in farmed chinook salmon. In all cases, the bacteria were either Mycobacterium neoaurum or an unidentified Rhodococcus spp.; in some fish, both types were present in roughly equal numbers, while in others, one type dominated. Despite occasionally recovering the bacteria from kidney or spleen, no lesions were found in these or in any other organ, suggesting that the localization to the eye was not incidental, but a specific tropism. Nevertheless, the possibility of predisposing cause(s) must be considered and these are discussed.
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- 1990
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11. Bacterial gill disease of salmonids; relationship between the severity of gill lesions and bacterial recovery
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V. E. Ostland, R. M. W. Stevenson, I. K. Barker, H. W. Ferguson, and J. F. Prescott
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Bacteriology ,medicine ,Aquatic animal ,Disease ,Aquatic Science ,Life history ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Microbiology ,Aquatic organisms - Published
- 1990
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12. Virulence-associated protein-specific serum immunoglobulin G-isotype expression in young foals protected against Rhodococcus equi pneumonia by oral immunization with virulent R. equi
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K E, Hooper-McGrevy, B N, Wilkie, and J F, Prescott
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Immunoglobulin Isotypes ,Virulence ,Rhodococcus equi ,Virulence Factors ,Immunoglobulin G ,Bacterial Vaccines ,Pneumonia, Bacterial ,Administration, Oral ,Animals ,Immunization ,Horses ,Antibodies, Bacterial - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine whether foals immunized orally from 2 days of age with virulent Rhodococcus equi developed a protective pulmonary immune response and to characterise the antibody response of the immunized foals to the virulence-associated proteins (Vaps) of the bacterium. Two groups of foals were used. One (n=4) was given live R. equi ATCC 33701 orally at 2, 7, and 14 days of age. The second group comprised three non-immunized foals age-matched to the vaccinates. At 3 weeks of age, 1 week after the final immunization, both groups were challenged intrabronchially with virulent R. equi ATCC 33701 and observed for 2 weeks post-challenge. Unvaccinated foals became clinically pneumonic and had high fever with increased heart and respiratory rates and severe pneumonia evident at necropsy. Foals of the immunized group remained healthy and lung lesions were not found post-mortem. Thus, it is possible to immunize young foals orally to protect them by 3 weeks of age against lung challenge with R. equi, even in the presence of maternal antibodies. The antibody response of the immunized foals confirmed that VapA and VapC are highly immunogenic. The immunoglobulin G isotype-related serum antibody response of immunized compared to non-immunized foals had an IgGT bias and a relatively low IgGa:IgGb ratio, both features different from what has been previously observed in immune adults and immune foals. This suggests that the serum IgG isotype profile of antibody cannot be used as a measure of evidence of protection against R. equi pneumonia.
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- 2005
13. The roles of Clostridium difficile and enterotoxigenic Clostridium perfringens in diarrhea in dogs
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J S, Weese, H R, Staempfli, J F, Prescott, S A, Kruth, S J, Greenwood, and H E, Weese
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Diarrhea ,Male ,Enterotoxins ,Dogs ,Clostridioides difficile ,Clostridium perfringens ,Case-Control Studies ,Bacterial Toxins ,Animals ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Female ,Dog Diseases - Abstract
In this prospective study, feces of dogs with diarrhea were compared with feces of normal dogs for the presence of Clostridium difficile, C difficile toxins A and B, C perfringens, and C perfingens enterotoxin (CPE). C difficile toxins A, B, or both were present in feces of 18 of 87 (21%) dogs with diarrhea and 4 of 55 (7%) normal dogs (P = 0.03), whereas CPE was present in the feces of 24 of 87 (28%) dogs with diarrhea and 3 of 55 (5%) normal dogs (P = 0.01). C difficile was isolated from 2 of 87 (2%) dogs with diarrhea but was not isolated from the feces of 55 normal dogs, possibly because of poor survival of the organism in fecal samples. C perfringens was isolated from the feces of 23 of 24 (96%) CPE-positive dogs with diarrhea, 52 of 63 (83%) CPE-negative dogs with diarrhea, and 39 of 55 (71%) CPE-negative dogs with normal feces. No correlation was found between C perfringens spore number and the presence of CPE.
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- 2001
14. Hygiene at winter bird feeders in a southwestern Ontario city
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J F, Prescott, D B, Hunter, and G D, Campbell
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Male ,Ontario ,Salmonella Infections, Animal ,integumentary system ,Urban Population ,Bird Diseases ,animal diseases ,food and beverages ,Food Contamination ,Hygiene ,Diet ,Birds ,Feces ,embryonic structures ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,sense organs ,Research Article - Abstract
To further understand the source of the epidemic of salmonellosis in some species of birds using bird feeders in southern Ontario in the winter of 1997-1998, 124 bird feeder stations were examined for their state of hygiene and for Salmonella on 5 occasions during the winter of 1999 in a city of 100,000 people in southwestern Ontario. No Salmonella were isolated from feed contaminated with feces recovered from the feeders. Squirrel-proof feeders were significantly less contaminated with feces than were other feeder types (hopper, platform, silo), which did not differ significantly in their hygiene scores. Contamination of squirrel-proof feeders increased significantly through the course of the study, but other feeder types showed no significant change. Hygiene was poorer if feeders were maintained equally by both male and female household members, particularly as they grew older, but no age or gender effect was observed if only one person was largely responsible for maintaining the feeders. We concluded that winter bird feeder stations in a southern Ontario city were not contaminated with Salmonella but that bird feeder stations could be designed better to reduce fecal contamination of feed.
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- 2000
15. Relatedness of Streptococcus canis from canine streptococcal toxic shock syndrome and necrotizing fasciitis
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L M, DeWinter and J F, Prescott
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Dogs ,Streptococcus pyogenes ,Streptococcal Infections ,Animals ,Humans ,Streptococcus ,Dog Diseases ,Fasciitis, Necrotizing ,Serotyping ,Shock, Septic ,Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field ,Research Article - Abstract
The emergence of streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (STSS) and necrotizing fasciitis (NF) in dogs caused by Streptococcus canis has been reported by our laboratory. Since clonal expansion is thought to be partially responsible for the spread of invasive strains of Streptococcus pyogenes in humans, the relatedness of 15 isolates of S. canis from canine STSS and/or NF was examined using pulsed field gel electrophoresis and biotyping; production of proteases and of a CAMP-like reaction were also examined. Only 2 of the 15 STSS and/or NF isolates were clonally related, suggesting that the emergence of canine STSS/NF is not the result of clonal expansion of one or more highly virulent strains of S. canis. All of the isolates produced proteases and demonstrated a CAMP-like reaction, which appear to be additional characteristics of S. canis.
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- 1999
16. Equine abortions in eastern Ontario due to leptospirosis
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J L, Shapiro, J F, Prescott, and G, Henry
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Ontario ,Fetus ,Pregnancy ,Animals ,Female ,Horse Diseases ,Leptospirosis ,Horses ,Abortion, Veterinary ,Research Article - Published
- 1999
17. Demographic analysis of the veterinary profession in Canada
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J F, Prescott and T J, Hulland
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Veterinary Medicine ,Canada ,Letter ,Workforce ,Animals ,Education, Veterinary ,Demography ,Forecasting ,Veterinarians - Published
- 1999
18. Antibiotics: miracle drugs or pig food?
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J F, Prescott
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Canada ,Swine ,Drug Resistance, Microbial ,Bacterial Infections ,Ruminants ,Legislation, Food ,Legislation, Drug ,Animal Feed ,United States ,Animal Diseases ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Europe ,Risk Factors ,Food Microbiology ,Animals ,Cattle ,Animal Husbandry ,Chickens ,Research Article - Published
- 1998
19. Leptospirosis in 2 unrelated dogs
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K, Hrinivich and J F, Prescott
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Leptospira ,Canada ,Vaccination ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,United States ,Blood Cell Count ,Blood Urea Nitrogen ,Dogs ,Creatinine ,Amylases ,Animals ,Calcium ,Female ,Leptospirosis ,Dog Diseases ,Research Article - Published
- 1997
20. Use of Rhodococcus equi virulence-associated protein for immunization of foals against R equi pneumonia
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J F, Prescott, V M, Nicholson, M C, Patterson, M C, Zandona Meleiro, A, Caterino de Araujo, J A, Yager, and M A, Holmes
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Antigens, Bacterial ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Virulence ,Virulence Factors ,Vaccination ,Immunization, Passive ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Bacterial Proteins ,Rhodococcus equi ,Immunoglobulin G ,Bacterial Vaccines ,Pneumonia, Bacterial ,Animals ,Female ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,Actinomycetales Infections - Abstract
To evaluate use of the virulence-associated protein of Rhodococcus equi in immunizing foals against R equi pneumonia.Eight (experimental group) and 6 (controls) mares with their foals.Virulence-associated protein extracted from R equi was used to prepare an acetone-precipitated. Triton X-extracted (APTX) antigen. After determination of the efficacy of passive immunization, in untreated foals or in foals given plasma from a horse vaccinated with APTX antigen or from a nonvaccinated horse, a field trial was done to evaluate the efficacy of vaccination of 8 mares, twice with APTX before parturition, and of their foals at ages 3 and 5 weeks; 6 mares and their foals served as unvaccinated controls. All 2-day-old foals were given plasma from local donor horses inoculated with a locally produced bacterin. Serum opsonizing activity produced by vaccination with APTX was determined. Passively immunized foals were challenge exposed with an aerosol of virulent R equi. Foals of the field trial were exposed to enzootic R equi infection.Inoculation with APTX resulted in high IgG antibody liters with opsonizing activity. Passive immunization of foals with plasma from an immunized horse enhanced bacterial clearance from the lungs, compared with that in foals not given plasma or given plasma without APTX antibodies. Vaccination of mares and foals exposed to natural infection resulted in development of R equi pneumonia in 4 of 8 vaccinated foals, but in only 1 of 6 unvaccinated foals.Vaccination with APTX antigen led to high-titer, opsonizing antibody. Plasma from a vaccinated horse appeared to enhance clearance of R equi from the lungs of foals. Paradoxically, vaccination of mares and their foals with APTX antigen did not protect foals and may have enhanced R equi pneumonia in the foals.
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- 1997
21. Update on canine streptococcal toxic shock syndrome and necrotizing fasciitis
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J F, Prescott, C W, Miller, K A, Mathews, J A, Yager, and L, DeWinter
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Ontario ,Dogs ,Streptococcal Infections ,Animals ,Dog Diseases ,Fasciitis, Necrotizing ,Shock, Septic ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Research Article - Published
- 1997
22. Canine streptococcal toxic shock syndrome and necrotising fasciitis
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J F, Prescott and L, DeWinter
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Dogs ,Streptococcal Infections ,Animals ,Female ,Dog Diseases ,Fasciitis, Necrotizing ,Shock, Septic - Published
- 1997
23. Canine toxic-shock syndrome. An emerging disease?
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S D, Betschel, V, Guru, C W, Miller, K A, Mathews, J F, Prescott, and D E, Low
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DNA, Bacterial ,Ontario ,Streptococcus ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Shock, Septic ,Bacterial Typing Techniques ,Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field ,Dogs ,Species Specificity ,Streptococcal Infections ,Animals ,Humans ,Dog Diseases ,Fasciitis, Necrotizing - Published
- 1997
24. Streptococcal toxic shock syndrome in dogs
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C W, Miller, J F, Prescott, K A, Mathews, S D, Betschel, J A, Yager, V, Guru, L, DeWinter, and D E, Low
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DNA, Bacterial ,Male ,Ontario ,Virulence ,Streptococcus ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Shock, Septic ,Bacterial Typing Techniques ,Necrosis ,Dogs ,Streptococcal Infections ,Animals ,Female ,Dog Diseases ,Fasciitis, Necrotizing ,Prospective Studies ,Lung ,Skin - Abstract
To determine the clinical, pathologic, and bacteriologic findings in dogs that developed severe invasive infections with group G streptococci (GGS) over a 6-month period in southern Ontario.Prospective case series.7 dogs n southern Ontario with severe streptococcal infection during a 6-month period.Using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, molecular typing of streptococcal isolates was performed. Isolates were examined for the M protein gene emm1.0, pyrogenic exotoxin genes speA, speB, speF, hyaluronic acid synthase genes hasA, hasB, and for C5a peptidase gene scpA by use of DNA probes or polymerase chain reaction.3 dogs with streptococcal shock without necrotizing fasciitis died or were euthanatized within 48 hours of admission, whereas 4 dogs with streptococcal shock and necrotizing fasciitis survived following surgical debridement, supportive medical treatment, and treatment with antibiotics. Of the 6 Lancefield group G streptococcal isolates available for characterization, 5 were Streptococcus canis and 1 had characteristics of group G streptococcal strains of human origin. Results of molecular typing indicated that isolates were unrelated to each other. Examination of the canine isolates for putative virulence genes found in human group A streptococci resulted in identification of the emm1.0 gene only in 1 of the isolates. The canine isolates otherwise lacked virulence genes associated with human group A streptococcal toxic shock infections. CLINICAL-IMPLICATIONS: The development of severe invasive infection in dogs resulting from GGS indicates that a virulent form of GGS has developed in southern Ontario.
- Published
- 1996
25. Role of CD4+, CD8+ and double negative T-cells in the protection of SCID/beige mice against respiratory challenge with Rhodococcus equi
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T L, Ross, G A, Balson, J S, Miners, G D, Smith, P E, Shewen, J F, Prescott, and J A, Yager
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Male ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,CD8 Antigens ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Mice, SCID ,Flow Cytometry ,Immunohistochemistry ,respiratory tract diseases ,Mice ,Liver ,Rhodococcus equi ,T-Lymphocyte Subsets ,CD4 Antigens ,Animals ,Female ,Actinomycetales Infections ,Lung ,Administration, Intranasal ,Spleen ,Research Article - Abstract
To evaluate the contributions of T-lymphocyte subsets in pulmonary immunity against Rhodococcus equi, C.B-17 SCID/beige mice were adoptively transferred with splenic lymphocytes from congenic BALB/c mice previously infected with R. equi. Spleen cells were enriched for either CD4+ or CD8+ populations before inoculation, Flow cytometry showed that each enriched population contained less than 0.5% cross contamination. Groups of adoptively transferred SCID/beige mice were sacrificed 6 and 13 d after intranasal infection with R. equi. Bacterial clearance was measured in the lungs, liver and spleen. Lesion development was assessed by gross and histopathological score and the fate of transferred cells assessed by flow cytometry and by immunohistochemistry. SCID/beige mice receiving either CD4+ or CD8+ T-cells were able to clear the infection better than control mice. On d 6 post-infection, bacterial numbers were significantly lower in the lungs of CD4+ transferred mice as compared to CD8+ mice. By d 13, both groups had cleared R. equi from all organs. CD4+ cells were however identified in the lung and spleen of CD8+ recipients at d 13 making conclusions about the role of CD8+ cells in R. equi clearance impossible. By contrast, no significant increases in CD8+ lymphocytes were observed in the organs of CD4+ recipients. All mice developed suppurative bronchopneumonia but lesions were most severe in the CD4+ group. Immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry confirmed that CD4+ and CD8+ cells had migrated to the lungs of adoptively transferred mice. Serum antibody against R, equi was not detected by ELISA in the recipients. SCID/beige mice receiving CD4-CD8- cells were unable to clear R. equi. The study supports the suggestion that CD4+ cells have a central role in R. equi clearance in mice.
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- 1996
26. Attempts to find phenotypic markers of the virulence plasmid of Rhodococcus equi
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A, De La Peña-Moctezuma, J F, Prescott, and M, Goodfellow
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Swine ,Hydrolysis ,Hydroxybutyrates ,Congo Red ,Drug Resistance, Microbial ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Chloramphenicol ,Phenotype ,Rhodococcus equi ,Animals ,Horses ,Amino Acids ,Cadmium ,Plasmids ,Research Article - Abstract
Four isolates of Rhodococcus equi, from pneumonic foals, and containing the 85 kb virulence plasmid, a porcine isolate containing an 80 kb plasmid, and their plasmid cured derivatives, were examined for 239 phenotypic properties in an attempt to find characters other than the virulence-associated protein (VapA) which might be encoded by the virulence plasmid in organisms grown at 37 degrees C. Tests chosen included those which have previously given variable results for R. equi isolates, since such variability might be attributed to plasmid curing, and characteristics which have been described as properties of plasmids of Rhodococcus species other than R. equi. Tests included cadmium resistance, Congo red binding, resistance to 26 antibiotics, conventional clinical microbiological tests, utilization of 95 different carbon sources, enzymatic activities in API ZYM, fluorogenic assays for exo- and endopeptidase, glycosidase activities, and testosterone degradation. Apart from production of VapA by foal isolates, no phenotypic property was identified in the plasmid-positive isolates. Phenotypic characteristics of R. equi that have not been described before, and might be useful in identification were: metabolism of N-acetyl-beta D-glucopyranoside, alpha- and beta-hydroxybutyric, alpha-ketobutyric and N-acetyl-glutamic acids, of methylpyruvate, heptanoate, nonanoate and stearate esters; exopeptidase activity against alanine-alanine-tyrosine, alanine-phenylalanine-lysine, glycine-arginine, lysine-alanine, and valine-glycine-alanine; endopeptidase activity against arginine and methionine; and hydrolysis of bis-phosphate ester.
- Published
- 1996
27. A physical map of the 85 kb virulence plasmid of Rhodococcus equi 103
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A, de la Peña-Moctezuma and J F, Prescott
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Virulence ,Rhodococcus equi ,Swine ,Restriction Mapping ,bacteria ,Animals ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Plasmids ,Research Article - Abstract
A physical map of the 85 kb virulence plasmid pOTS from Rhodococcus equi 103 was constructed. The restriction map contains 2 AsnI, 5 BglII, 9 EcoRI, 4 HindIII, and 3 XbaI sites. The positions of the EcoRI and HindIII of pOTS are identical to that of the 85 kb virulence plasmid of R. equi ATCC 33701 reported recently by others. EcoRI restriction fragment sizes were similar in the 85 kb plasmids isolated from 4 horse derived R. equi but, except apparently for the 28.3 and possibly 2.0 and 1.5 kb fragments, were different in an 80.1 kb plasmid isolated from a pig source R. equi.
- Published
- 1995
28. Serological response in sheep vaccinated against Coxiella burnetii (Q fever)
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G H, Lang, J F, Prescott, and J C, Williams
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Male ,Sheep ,Guinea Pigs ,Vaccination ,Sheep Diseases ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Coxiella burnetii ,Bacterial Vaccines ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,Q Fever ,Research Article - Published
- 1994
29. Clinical and endoscopic study to estimate the incidence of distal respiratory tract infection in thoroughbred foals on Ontario breeding farms
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A M, Hoffman, L, Viel, E, Juniper, and J F, Prescott
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Male ,Ontario ,Incidence ,Endoscopy ,Pilot Projects ,Breeding ,Cohort Studies ,Risk Factors ,Bronchoscopy ,Animals ,Female ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,Respiratory Tract Infections - Abstract
Respiratory tract infections are prevalent in foals, yet the frequency with which the distal airways are affected in clinical episodes of respiratory tract disease has not been evaluated to our knowledge. The objective of the study was to determine the incidence of distal respiratory tract infection (DRTI) in foals on a sample of Thoroughbred breeding farms (n = 10) in Ontario. In a pilot study, clinical criteria commonly used to select foals for antimicrobial treatment (detection of abnormal lung sounds, plus nasal discharge, cough, fever, tachypnea, and/or lethargy) were found to segregate foals with and without endoscopically confirmed DRTI. Mucopurulent exudate and bronchial erythema were observed more frequently (P0.005), bronchial lavage total cell count and neutrophil concentration were significantly (P0.005) higher, and intracellular cocci were recovered significantly (P0.01) more often from bronchial lavage samples of affected foals (n = 8) than of controls (n = 8). These clinical criteria were used to identify cases in a cohort of Thoroughbred foals (n = 219) from May 1 to October 30, 1991. Case morbidity adjusted for clustering was 82 +/- 5% (95% confidence limits, 72 to 92%). Most (74%) episodes of clinical DRTI were detected in July and August, and equal numbers were detected before (53%) and after (47%) weaning of foals. Of 178 cases, 66 (48%) were selected at random for endoscopy and bronchial lavage. Grade-II pharyngeal lymphoid hyperplasia was observed commonly (60% of foals); auditory tube diverticulum (guttural pouch) discharge was observed in 18 of 86 (21%) foals, and guttural pouch infection was confirmed in 6 of 7 foals examined endoscopically.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1993
30. Association of microbiologic flora with clinical, endoscopic, and pulmonary cytologic findings in foals with distal respiratory tract infection
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A M, Hoffman, L, Viel, J F, Prescott, S, Rosendal, and J, Thorsen
- Subjects
Ontario ,Bacteria ,Viruses ,Animals ,Streptococcus ,Endoscopy ,Female ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid ,Lung ,Respiratory Tract Infections - Abstract
Undifferentiated distal respiratory tract disease (nasal discharge, cough, pneumonia) in foals (1 to 8 months old) is a burdensome economic problem on breeding farms; yet, the infective agents associated with these episodes have not been well described. Possible causes of these episodes of illness were investigated by culturing specimens of proximal and distal airways of clinically diseased foals (n = 101), prior to any treatment, for aerobic and anaerobic bacteria and viruses (rhinoviruses, equine arteritis virus, equine herpesvirus subtype 1 [EHV-1], influenza virus, and adenovirus). Pairs of sera (n = 47) were examined for antibodies to influenza A virus, equine subtypes 1 and 2, EHV-1, and adenovirus antigens, and sera obtained from foals during acute infection were examined for antibodies (by agar gel immunodiffusion [AGID]) to equi factor antigens of Rhodococcus equi. Viruses were not isolated from the proximal (swab) or distal (bronchial lavage) airway specimens in foals, and only 2 of 47 randomly selected foals seroconverted to EHV-1. Serotiters to the other viruses were low and frequently decreasing between samples, which was compatible with maternally derived antibody. Streptococcus zooepidemicus was the predominant isolate from bronchial lavage specimens (88/101 cases), accompanied by alpha-hemolytic streptococci (8 cases), Bordetella bronchiseptica (13 cases), Staphylococcus epidermidis (9 cases), and other organisms in lesser frequency. Only Str zooepidemicus was recovered significantly (P0.05) more often in cases than in controls. The AGID test was found useful to detect foals with presumed exposure to R equi, but positive tests results did not correspond well with bacterial culture results; positive AGID results were recorded in 34% of culture-negative foals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1993
31. Microbiologic changes during antimicrobial treatment and rate of relapse of distal respiratory tract infections in foals
- Author
-
A M, Hoffman, L, Viel, and J F, Prescott
- Subjects
Cohort Studies ,Ontario ,Bacteria ,Recurrence ,Trimethoprim, Sulfamethoxazole Drug Combination ,Animals ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,Respiratory Tract Infections ,Anti-Bacterial Agents - Abstract
Despite the high incidence of distal respiratory tract infection of undetermined cause on farms, to our knowledge, the microbiologic effects of conventional antimicrobial treatment for this condition have not been studied. We evaluated the possible pathogenic role of bacterial isolates from the distal airways of foals with clinical respiratory tract disease, by correlating changes in their numbers (increase or decrease) with clinical, endoscopic, and pulmonary cytologic signs of disease resolution during treatment with antimicrobial drugs. We also determined qualitative changes in in vitro antimicrobial susceptibility of bacterial isolates after 7 days of treatment and relapse rate of foals. Significant (P0.05) decrease in the numbers of an isolate in the airways was considered strong evidence of a pathogenic role in this disease syndrome. Foals with endoscopically confirmed distal respiratory tract infection (DRTI; n = 65) were selected at random for treatment (n = 56) or nontreatment (n = 9), and bronchial lavage specimens were cultured and evaluated cytologically before and after 7 days of treatment with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMS) and a beta-lactam drug (penicillin, ampicillin, or sulbactam-ampicillin), the standard treatment in all foals. The effect of treatment was to abruptly reduce the clinical (nasal discharge, cough, adventitious lung sounds) and cytologic signs of airway infection. Severity of disease in nontreated foals, however, did not change or did worsen over time. Reduction in the frequency and numbers of Streptococcus zooepidemicus isolated during treatment supported a causal role for this organism in the clinical syndrome observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1993
32. Leptospira and Leptospirosis
- Author
-
J F Prescott
- Subjects
0303 health sciences ,General Veterinary ,biology ,030306 microbiology ,030231 tropical medicine ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Microbiology ,Leptospirosis ,Virology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Leptospira ,medicine - Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Lincomycin-induced severe colitis in ponies: association with Clostridium cadaveris
- Author
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H R, Staempfli, J F, Prescott, and M L, Brash
- Subjects
Clostridium ,Disease Models, Animal ,Salmonella ,Animals ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,Enterocolitis, Pseudomembranous ,Lincomycin ,Research Article - Abstract
Four groups of two ponies, free of fecal Salmonella and Clostridium cadaveris, were treated as follows: Group A, control group; B, single nasogastrically administered dose of lincomycin (25 mg/kg) followed 48 h later by 3 L of C. cadaveris (10(9) organisms/mL); C, the same dose of lincomycin as group B; D, the same dose of C. cadaveris as group B on each of three occasions at 12 h intervals. Groups A and D remained healthy, but groups B and C developed severe colitis 48-56 h (B) or 72 h (C) after administration of lincomycin. Three ponies were euthanized and one in group B died. Clostridium cadaveris was isolated at about 10(6)/mL of colonic contents from these ponies, but one pony in group B also yielded Salmonella typhimurium from the colon. Subsequent challenge of group A ponies (3 L of C. cadaveris 10(9)/mL, three times at 12 h intervals) did not produce colitis. Nasogastric administration of lincomycin (25 mg/kg) to group A and D ponies, 20 days after administration of C. cadaveris, resulted in severe colitis in all ponies within 48-72 h. Salmonella agona was isolated from the colonic contents of one pony and C. cadaveris (10(6)/mL) from all four ponies. Clostridium cadaveris was not isolated from the colonic content of 45 healthy horses examined immediately after death. These studies confirm the potential for lincomycin to induce severe enterocolitis in ponies and implicate C. cadaveris further as a cause of "idiopathic colitis" in ponies.
- Published
- 1992
34. Purification and properties of cholesterol oxidase and choline phosphohydrolase from Rhodococcus equi
- Author
-
R S, Machang'u and J F, Prescott
- Subjects
Cholesterol Oxidase ,Rhodococcus equi ,Chromatography, Gel ,Phospholipase D ,Animals ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Chromatography, Ion Exchange ,Hemolysis ,Research Article - Abstract
Cholesterol oxidase (CO) and choline phosphohydrolase (CPH) exoenzymes were isolated from culture supernatants of Rhodococcus equi ATCC 33701 and their hemolytic and cytotoxic activities examined. The purifications involved differential ammonium sulphate precipitation, ion exchange and gel filtration chromatography. A purification of 32.8-fold and a yield of 0.3% of CO were determined by synergistic hemolysis of sheep red blood cells (SRBC) presensitized with Staphylococcus aureus beta toxin. The enzymatic activity of CO was also demonstrated by oxidation of aqueous cholesterol suspensions. The activity of CO was reversibly inhibited by concentration. A purification of 412.4-fold and a yield of 1.7% of CPH were determined by hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyphosphorylcholine. Purity of both exoenzymes was confirmed by immunoblotting. On sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the CO had a molecular mass (Mr) of 60 kd and the CPH a Mr of 65 kd. Choline phosphohydrolase did not hydrolyse sphingomyelin. Sphingomyelinase C (SMC) activity was however demonstrated in concentrated culture supernatants. This dissociation of SMC from CPH activity indicates that R. equi produces two distinct phospholipase C exoenzymes, a CPH and a SMC. Both CO and CPH combined, or individually, did not lyse native SRBC even with subsequent chilling of the cells at 4 degrees C ("hot-cold" treatment). Purified CO lysed beta toxin-sensitized SRBC. The CPH showed only minor hemolytic activity against such sensitized SRBC even at high concentrations. Combination of CO and CPH in lysis of beta toxin sensitized SRBC showed only minor additive rather than synergistic effects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1991
35. Is canine leptospirosis underdiagnosed in southern Ontario? A case report and serological survey
- Author
-
J F, Prescott, R L, Ferrier, V M, Nicholson, K M, Johnston, and B, Hoff
- Subjects
Articles - Abstract
An eight-year-old city-dwelling Cairn Terrier was presented to a veterinary hospital in acute renal failure with evidence of hepatic insufficiency. The dog was treated symptomatically over three days, during which time vomiting was largely controlled, but it became jaundiced as hepatic insufficiency worsened. Leptospira pomona was demonstrated in large numbers by immunofluorescent staining of urinary sediment. It was isolated and its identity confirmed as L. pomona genotype kennewicki. The source of the infection was thought to be raccoons.Sera from 474 blood samples submitted for diagnostic purposes to two clinical pathology laboratories in southern Ontario were examined with the microscopic agglutination test for antibodies to selected leptospiral serovars. Of the sera tested, 39.2% reacted at titers/=1:100 with one or more serovars, the majority of all sera (26.2%) reacting at low titers to canicola or icterohaemorrhagiae, or both. These reactions likely resulted from vaccination. A smaller proportion reacted to other serovars tested: autumnalis (3.8%), bratislava (8.2%), grippotyphosa (1.9%), hardjo (3.0%), and pomona (3.2%). Among dogs reacting to these latter serovars (other than bratislava), many had broadly cross-reacting and relatively high titers. One dog with a titer of 1:800 to pomona had had a disease typical of leptospirosis two years previously. Three other dogs with high titers to autumnalis, bratislava, or mixed serovars had clinical histories compatible with leptospirosis.We suggest that leptospiral bacterins for dogs in Ontario be broadened to include at least serovars autumnalis and pomona.
- Published
- 1991
36. Differences in signs and lesions in sheep and goats with enterotoxemia induced by intraduodenal infusion of Clostridium perfringens type D
- Author
-
T E, Blackwell, D G, Butler, J F, Prescott, and B P, Wilcock
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,Male ,Goat Diseases ,Sheep ,Clostridium perfringens ,Goats ,Bacterial Toxins ,Osmolar Concentration ,Sheep Diseases ,Creatinine ,Clostridium Infections ,Animals ,Urea ,Female ,Rabbits - Abstract
Enterotoxemia was induced in 4 lambs and 4 goat kids by continuous intraduodenal infusion of a whole culture of Clostridium perfringens type D. Clinical signs, hematologic values, biochemical alterations, and postmortem lesions in the lambs and goat kids were compared. The 4 lambs and 4 goat kids died within 25 hours of beginning the infusions. Lesions were not observed in the gastrointestinal tract of the 4 lambs; however, severe hemorrhagic enterocolitis was found in the 4 goat kids. This difference between the lambs and goat kids in the lesions caused by experimentally induced enterotoxemia may explain the discrepancies reported between sheep and goats in clinical signs, response to treatment, and efficacy of vaccination observed in naturally induced enterotoxemia in the 2 species.
- Published
- 1991
37. Field evaluation of a commercial M-protein vaccine against Streptococcus equi infection in foals
- Author
-
A M, Hoffman, H R, Staempfli, J F, Prescott, and L, Viel
- Subjects
Antigens, Bacterial ,Vaccination ,Streptococcus ,Disease Outbreaks ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Bacterial Proteins ,Double-Blind Method ,Lymphadenitis ,Streptococcal Infections ,Bacterial Vaccines ,Animals ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,Carrier Proteins ,Neck ,Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins - Abstract
A double-blind randomized clinical trial was undertaken to determine the value of parenterally administered Streptococcus equi M-protein vaccine in foals during an epizootic of strangles. Weaned mixed-breed foals (n = 664) housed on 2 adjacent feed-lots (A and B) arrived over a 5-day period, 2 weeks before primary vaccination. Foals in lot B (n = 114) were randomly administered vaccine (n = 59) or saline solution (placebo; n = 55) on 3 occasions at biweekly intervals. Foals in lot A (n = 450) were given 1 dose of vaccine (n = 225) or placebo. The following clinical observations were scored blindly by a single observer for all foals in lot B and for 120 (randomly sampled) foals in lot A on a single day, 2 (Lot B) and 6 (lot A) weeks after final vaccination: cervical lymphadenopathy, type of bilateral nasal discharge, and palpable swelling at injection site(s). Bacteriologic culture of nasal swab specimens or lymph node aspirates from selected foals with clinical disease yielded S equi. Cervical lymphadenopathy was observed in 17 of 59 (29%) vaccinates and 39 of 55 (71%) nonvaccinated controls in lot B and in 32 of 60 (53%) vaccinates and 29 of 60 (48%) controls in lot A. Contingency chi 2 analysis confirmed significantly lower cervical lymphadenopathy rate (chi 2 = 18.5; P less than 0.001) and prevalence of mucopurulent nasal discharge (chi 2 = 11.4; P less than 0.01) for vaccinates in lot B only. Swelling(s) at the vaccine injection site were palpated in 44% of lot B and 29% of lot A vaccinates vs less than 2% of placebo controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1991
38. Prognostic features and clinical presentation of acute idiopathic enterocolitis in horses
- Author
-
H R, Staempfli, H G, Townsend, and J F, Prescott
- Subjects
Articles - Abstract
Clinical and hematological changes observed on presentation of 47 horses referred to the Ontario Veterinary College with acute idiopathic colitis were analyzed for their prognostic features. Cases of acute enterocolitis were characterized by fever, dehydration, abnormalities of serum electrolyte concentrations, azotemia, hypoalbuminemia, and increased serum concentrations of muscle enzymes. Severely dehydrated horses were seven times more likely to die or be euthanized than those that were not dehydrated. Other factors associated with failure to survive included the following: increased hematocrit, increased number of band neutrophils, increased serum creatinine and urea concentrations, and decreased blood pH and increasingly negative base excess. The results of multivariate variable analysis (stepwise logistic regression) suggested that, among the variables tested, base excess was the best predictor of death or survival. Twenty of 47 horses died or were euthanized. Reasons for death or euthanasia included: severe disseminated intravascular coagulation, unresponsiveness of severe metabolic acidosis and hypoproteinemia to treatments, and severity of colonic lesions on exploratory laparotomy. Of the surviving horses, three developed chronic laminitis (two were destroyed) and five developed jugular vein thrombosis. Fourteen of 16 horses for which subsequent histories were available returned to normal function.Early recognition of the disease, combined with early and aggressive correction of dehydration and of acid-base imbalance, may be important determinants of survival in horses with acute idiopathic colitis.
- Published
- 1991
39. In vitro susceptibility of selected veterinary bacterial pathogens to ciprofloxacin, enrofloxacin and norfloxacin
- Author
-
J F, Prescott and K M, Yielding
- Subjects
Enrofloxacin ,animal diseases ,Haemophilus ,Streptococcus ,Actinobacillus ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,respiratory system ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Corynebacterium ,In Vitro Techniques ,Quinolones ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Anti-Infective Agents ,Ciprofloxacin ,Erysipelothrix ,bacteria ,Actinomyces ,Rhodococcus ,Pasteurella ,Fluoroquinolones ,Norfloxacin ,Research Article - Abstract
The minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) of ciprofloxacin, enrofloxacin, and norfloxacin were tested for approximately ten clinical isolates of each of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, Actinobacillus suis, Actinomyces pyogenes, Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis, Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae, Haemophilus parasuis, Haemophilus somnus, Pasteurella haemolytica, Pasteurella multocida, Rhodococcus equi, Streptococcus equi, Streptococcus suis and Streptococcus zooepidemicus. Ciprofloxacin and enrofloxacin had similar activity and were more active than norfloxacin. All isolates had an MIC of 1.0 microgram/mL or less for ciprofloxacin and enrofloxacin, and these drugs had particularly marked activity against the gram-negative bacteria tested.
- Published
- 1990
40. Rhodococcus equi infections in goats
- Author
-
R. D. Welsh, J. F. Prescott, O. Tkachuk-Saad, and P. Lusis
- Subjects
Goat Diseases ,Virulence ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Goats ,Osteomyelitis ,Actinomycetales Infection ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Microbiology ,Rhodococcus equi ,medicine ,Animals ,Splenic disease ,Actinomycetales Infections - Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli serotypes isolated from chickens, cattle, and pigs
- Author
-
D L Munroe, J F Prescott, and J L Penner
- Subjects
Diarrhea ,Microbiology (medical) ,Antiserum ,Serotype ,Swine ,Campylobacter ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Campylobacter jejuni ,Microbiology ,Enteritis ,Feces ,Campylobacter coli ,medicine ,Animals ,Cattle ,Serotyping ,medicine.symptom ,Chickens ,Research Article - Abstract
A total of 191 Campylobacter jejuni and 125 Campylobacter coli were isolated from the intestinal content of 398 chickens, 421 cattle, and 203 pigs. All 108 chicken isolates and 73 of 80 cattle isolates were C. jejuni, but 115 of the 118 pig isolates were C. coli. A total of 84% of the C. jejuni and 64% of the C. coli isolates were typed on the basis of thermostable antigens with 20 antisera prepared against frequently occurring serotypes in Campylobacter enteritis in man (15 C. jejuni, 6 C. coli serotypes). A total of 96% of the chicken isolates and 67% of the cattle isolates belonged to 11 C. jejuni serotypes that occur most frequently in human cases of enteritis (serotypes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 13/16, 18, 21, 23, 31, and 36). Serotype 8, a relatively common human isolate, was not recovered. The C. coli isolates from pigs belonged to serotypes uncommon among human isolates.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Pathology of Experimental Corynebacterium equi Infection in Foals following Intrabronchial Challenge
- Author
-
J A, Johnson, J F, Prescott, and R J, Markham
- Subjects
Corynebacterium Infections ,General Veterinary ,040301 veterinary sciences ,animal diseases ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Corynebacterium ,digestive system ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Epithelium ,respiratory tract diseases ,0403 veterinary science ,Necrosis ,Phagocytosis ,parasitic diseases ,Bronchopneumonia ,Animals ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,Lung - Abstract
Six foals were inoculated intrabronchially with a suspension of Corynebacterium equi. Six weeks before this challenge, three foals were vaccinated with a C. equi bacterin. Three foals were unvaccinated controls. All foals developed a severe bronchopneumonia in the inoculated lung, indicating that vaccination was not protective. Three foals (two vaccinated, one control) were killed eight to nine days after infection. One control died on day 9 with lesions of disseminated intravascular coagulation. The remaining two foals (one vaccinated, one control) were killed on day 17. C. equi was cultured in large numbers from affected lung and bronchial lymph nodes, and in smaller numbers from unaffected lung. spleen, and liver in all foals. In the 8- to 9-day-old lung lesions, the alveoli were filled with macrophages, neutrophils, and multinucleate giant cells and most contained numerous C. equi. The few foci of alveolar necrosis were associated with groups of bacteria-laden macrophages undergoing degeneration. In the lesions of 17-day duration. there was extensive parenchymal destruction with little fibrous tissue reaction. Lesions common to both groups included hyperplastic bronchiolitis, pulmonary edema, and perivascular lymphocytic cuffs and a pyogranulomatous lymphadenitis in bronchial nodes. One vaccinated foal had a microscopic pyogranulomatous colitis. The lesions in the experimentally infected foals are compared with those in naturally infected foals and discussed in terms of likely pathogenetic mechanisms involved in C. equi pneumonia in foals.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Seroprevalence and association with abortion of leptospirosis in cattle in Ontario
- Author
-
J F, Prescott, R B, Miller, V M, Nicholson, S W, Martin, and T, Lesnick
- Subjects
Ontario ,Pregnancy ,animal diseases ,Animals ,Cattle Diseases ,Cattle ,Female ,Leptospirosis ,Abortion, Veterinary ,Leptospira interrogans ,Serotyping ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Research Article - Abstract
Sera were collected using a systematic random sampling from 348 cattle herds in Ontario, in proportion to the cattle population in different areas. One cow in five from 296 dairy herds and one in three from 52 beef herds were sampled. The sera were analyzed for prevalence of antibodies to Leptospira interrogans serovar grippotyphosa, hardjo, icterohaemorhagiae and pomona using the microscopic agglutination test. Herd seroprevalence (one or more animals with titer greater than or equal to 80) in beef and dairy herds combined was grippotyphosa 2%, hardjo 13.8%, icterohaemorrhagiae 10.1% and pomona 25.8%; 39% of all herds showed evidence of leptospiral infection with one or more serovars; 44.2% of 52 beef herds had serological evidence of infection with serovar hardjo compared to 8.4% of 296 dairy herds (P less than 0.0001). Seroprevalence of other serovars was not significantly different between beef and dairy herds. The proportion of beef animals seropositive for hardjo and for pomona increased with age, particularly for hardjo; 26.5% of beef animals aged nine years or over were seropositive for hardjo. Dairy animals showed a significant rise of hardjo but not pomona titers with age. The seroprevalence of pomona infection was significantly higher in dairy cattle in eastern Ontario than in other regions. Thirty-four (6.1%) of 553 aborted bovine fetuses had leptospires detected by immunofluorescence techniques. Sixty-five percent of these fetuses were from submissions made between November and January. Leptospires were identified as serovar hardjo by specific immunofluorescence. There appeared, however, to be a paradoxical serological response in that eight aborting cows had antibody titers to pomona rather than hardjo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1988
44. Campylobacter jejuni enteritis in man and domestic animals
- Author
-
J F, Prescott and D L, Munroe
- Subjects
Swine Diseases ,Swine ,Cattle Diseases ,Cat Diseases ,Enteritis ,Poultry ,Campylobacter fetus ,Dogs ,Animals, Domestic ,Zoonoses ,Campylobacter Infections ,Cats ,Animals ,Humans ,Cattle ,Dog Diseases ,Poultry Diseases - Published
- 1982
45. Antibody response of horses to Rhodococcus equi antigens
- Author
-
J M, Chirino-Trejo and J F, Prescott
- Subjects
Antigens, Bacterial ,animal diseases ,parasitic diseases ,Antibody Formation ,Animals ,Rhodococcus ,Horses ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,respiratory tract diseases ,Research Article - Abstract
The antigens extracted from strains belonging to seven capsular serotypes of Rhodococcus equi, as well as from two wild strains isolated from pneumonic foals, were examined. Whole-cell antigens and soluble products present in broth culture supernatants were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, electroblotted onto nitrocellulose, and stained with serum from hyperimmunized rabbits or foals. Foal sera used included sera from pneumonic animals with known titer to equi factors; from animals bled monthly on a farm with enzootic pneumonia, and from animals bled monthly on a farm with no history of R. equi pneumonia. The humoral response of foals to somatic antigen preparations was negligible, with few differences noted between sera from healthy, subclinically affected, and sick foals. The humoral response to R. equi broth culture supernatant products appeared more marked and was related to equi factor antibody titer. These findings suggest that the humoral response to R. equi whole-cell antigens is unimportant in protection against disease, which is consistent with the behavior of the organism as a facultative intracellular pathogen.
- Published
- 1987
46. Lymphocyte immunostimulation in the diagnosis of Corynebacterium equi pneumonia of foals
- Author
-
J F, Prescott, T H, Ogilvie, and R J, Markham
- Subjects
Antigens, Bacterial ,Corynebacterium Infections ,Animals ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,Pneumonia ,Corynebacterium ,Lymphocyte Activation - Abstract
A lymphocyte stimulation test using antigens of Corynebacterium equi was used to compare the response of peripheral blood lymphocytes from foals with C equi pneumonia with those of clinically normal foals and adult horses. The test clearly distinguished infected foals from normal foals when tested in animals less than or equal to 2 months old. After the 2nd month, stimulation response from individual normal foals sometimes exceed those from infected foals, but mean stimulation response to C equi antigens was significantly (P less than 0.025) greater in 3- to 5-month-old infected foals when compared with mean values of 3- to 5-month-old normal foals. Mean stimulation responses in 5- to 7-month-old foals, which had recovered from C equi pneumonia, could not be distinguished from mean responses of normal foals. The test could still, however, be used diagnostically in foals greater than 2 months of age if stimulation responses were low. The test indicated the great extent of exposure to C equi in the normal horse population.
- Published
- 1980
47. Antibody to equi factor(s) in the diagnosis of Corynebacterium equi pneumonia of foals
- Author
-
J F, Prescott, R, Coshan-Gauthier, and L, Barksdale
- Subjects
Corynebacterium Infections ,animal diseases ,Exotoxins ,Pneumonia ,Corynebacterium ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,respiratory tract diseases ,parasitic diseases ,Immunologic Techniques ,bacteria ,Animals ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,Research Article - Abstract
Antibody to equi factor(s) in cases of Corynebacterium equi pneumonia in foals was detected using C. pseudotuberculosis exotoxin sensitized calf red blood cells. The test was standardized using antitoxin produced in rabbits by injection of equi factor(s). All sera from ten foals with culture-diagnosed C. equi pneumonia had antibodies to equi factor(s) (titre range 8-256, mean 74.0) and nine sera from 11 foals with suspected C. equi pneumonia also showed antibodies (titre range 4-512, mean 136.4). Two of five pneumonia foals with transtracheal aspirate cultures not yielding C. equi had such antibodies. Fifty-eight of 59 control horse sera had no antibodies; the one positive serum came from a foal on a farm where C. equi pneumonia was endemic. By contrast only five of 15 foals with experimentally-induced C. equi pneumonia had antibodies to equi factor(s), probably because the acute nature of the disease produced did not mimic the chronic course of the natural disease. Antibody to equi factor(s) can be used in the diagnosis of naturally-occurring corynebacterial pneumonia in foals.
- Published
- 1984
48. Giant cell hepatitis in four aborted foals: A possible leptospiral infection
- Author
-
I W, Wilkie, J F, Prescott, M J, Hazlett, M G, Maxie, and A A, van Dreumel
- Subjects
Brief Communications/Communications Brèves - Published
- 1988
49. Campylobacter jejuni colitis in gnotobiotic dogs
- Author
-
J F, Prescott, I K, Barker, K I, Manninen, and O P, Miniats
- Subjects
Dogs ,Campylobacter Infections ,Animals ,Germ-Free Life ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Colitis ,Research Article - Abstract
Campylobacter jejuni of human and canine origin was inoculated orally into six gnotobiotically reared Beagle puppies and reactions were compared with two controls. Inoculated dogs developed transient lassitude, inappetence, mild diarrhea and tenesmus during the period 36-72 hours after inoculation. Pairs of dogs killed 43 hours, and five and seven days after inoculation had lesions limited to typhlitis and colitis. Congestion of colonic mucosa, associated loss of goblet cells, attenuation and exfoliation of surface epithelium with microerosions, hypertrophy of glands and neutrophil infiltration of lamina propria were seen during the acute phase. Less severe surface and inflammatory lesions were evident at five and seven days, with hyperplasia of the proliferative compartment in mucosal glands. Campylobacter established at over 10(10) organisms per gram of colonic content but did not invade the mucosa. It was concluded that the gnotobiotic dog may be a suitable model for investigation of the pathogenesis of Campylobacter colitis.
- Published
- 1981
50. Carriage of Campylobacter jejuni in healthy and diarrheic animals
- Author
-
J F, Prescott and C W, Bruin-Mosch
- Subjects
Diarrhea ,Mink ,Animals, Domestic ,Campylobacter Infections ,Carrier State ,Animals ,Campylobacter - Abstract
Feces from normal and diarrheic animals were cultured for Campylobacter jejuni. A clear difference could not be detected in carriage between normal and diarrheic cattle, horses, pigs, and dogs. Too few diarrheic goats, sheep, and rabbits were sampled for conclusions to be made. Carriage rates (%) detected in normal animals were as follows: ducks 88.3, chickens 23.8, sheep 13.6, rabbits 11.3, goats 2.7, cattle 2.5, and dogs 0.5. The organism was not isolated from horses and mink. Carriage rates varied within a species between animals from different sources.
- Published
- 1981
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