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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two cases of Aujeszky's disease in a cat and a dog belonging to the same owner are reported. The two animals each were five months of age. The symptoms shown by the cat were typical of Aujeszky's disease: intense itching, salivation and the head bent to one side. The main symptoms shown by the dog consisted in salivation, ptosis of one eye, a drooping ear, the head bent to one side and
ataxia
. As itching was not observed in the dog and the animal had spent the first months of its life in wooded surroundings, it could also have been affected with
rabies
, although it had been inoculated with LEP-Flury vaccine forty days prior to importation. It is of importance to the practitioner to know that itching may be absent in dogs with Aujeszky's disease and that
rabies
should also be suspected in these cases. Only a laboratory diagnosis will be conclusive. Studies were negative for
rabies
, the virus of Aujeszky's disease being found to be present in the two cases. The source of infection probably consisted in contaminated pork offal (larynges).
...
PMID:[An atypical case of Aujeszky's disease in a dog (author's transl)]. 16 63
The records of 21 horses with
rabies
were reviewed. Results of fluorescent antibody testing for
rabies
antigen in brain tissue were positive in each case. According to the histories, 5 of the horses had been vaccinated for
rabies
between 4 to 24 months prior to the onset of the clinical signs. Bite wounds were not observed on any of the horses, and exposure to a suspected rabid animal was witnessed in only 5 cases. Clinical signs of disease at the time of initial examination included
ataxia
and paresis of the hindquarters (9/21, 43%), lameness (5/21, 24%), recumbency (3/21, 14%), pharyngeal paralysis (2/21, 10%), and colic (2/21, 10%). The major clinical signs observed over the course of hospitalization included recumbency (21/21; 100%), hyperesthesia (17/21; 81%), loss of tail and anal sphincter tone (12/21; 57%), fever (11/21; 52%), and
ataxia
and paresis of the hindquarters (11/21; 52%). Mean survival time after the onset of clinical signs was 4.47 days (range, 1 to 7 days). Supportive treatment, given to 9 horses, had no effect on survival time and did not correlate with the detection of negri bodies at necropsy. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was obtained from 6 horses and was determined to be abnormal in 5. The most common abnormality was a slightly high total cell count (5/6), with a predominance of lymphocytes (4/6). The CSF total protein concentration was high in only 2 horses. At necropsy, there was gross evidence of diffuse brain edema, meningeal congestion, and focal areas of hemorrhage in 5 horses (24%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Rabies in horses: 21 cases (1970-1990). 160 22
An immunohistochemical and histopathological study using the ABC technique was carried out to examine time-sequential virus spread in the central nervous system (CNS) of mice after inoculation with the CVS strain of fixed
rabies
virus by different routes; intracerebral (ic), intraocular (io), intranasal (in), intramuscular (im) and subcutaneous (sc). Only the ic and io inoculations caused fatal infections, so that detailed analysis was conducted on mice inoculated by these two routes. In ic-inoculated mice, viral antigens were detected mainly in neurons in the cerebral cortex and in the pyramidal cells and granular cells of the hippocampus. After io inoculation, viral antigen was first detected in the trigeminal nerve ganglia, following which it spreads to the cerebral cortex and cerebellum. In the hippocampus only a few cells were viral antigen-positive at the early stage after io inoculation. There were no inflammatory lesions or Negri bodies in the CNS of mice infected by either route. This suggests that clinical signs such as
ataxia
or depression leading to death may be due to the direct effect of the virus on the functions of neural cells, but not to inflammatory reactions. The ABC method will be useful for the early diagnosis of suspected patients or animals to have the disease when conventional histopathological and immunofluorescent antibody techniques can not detect lesions or viral antigens.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical and histopathological study of experimental rabies infection in mice. 164 65
Striped skunks were inoculated intracerebrally with the scrapie agent (suspension of brain from a naturally infected Suffolk sheep) or intramuscularly with street
rabies
virus (suspension of salivary glands from naturally infected skunks). Those given the scrapie agent developed clinical signs of weakness, posterior
ataxia
, and emaciation after incubated periods of 8 to 23 months. Those inoculated with
rabies
virus developed clinical signs of
rabies
(aggressive behavior, hyperexcitability,
ataxia
and paralysis) after incubation periods of 20 to 62 days. The gross lesions in the brains of the skunks given the scrapie agent consisted of marked atrophy of the thalamus and moderate atrophy of the cerebrum. No gross lesions occurred in the rabid skunks. Histologically, the type of spongiform lesion in
rabies
was the same as that in scrapie. However, spongiform change of
rabies
infected brains was less extensive (only rarely affected the basal ganglia, hippocampus or hypothalamus) than that of brains infected with the scrapie agent and was characterized by fewer numbers of small vacuoles (as a proportion of total number of vacuoles) than occurred in scrapie spongiform change.
...
PMID:Comparison of spongiform lesions in experimental scrapie and rabies in skunks. 321 30
Five cases of dumb
rabies
were examined, quarantined and observed from the time of presentation until death. Two of the dogs bit four people, three children and an adult. Ages of dogs ranged from eight weeks to 30 months. Only one of these dogs had been vaccinated against
rabies
. One dog out of the five was simultaneously affected with trypanosomiasis and inapparent
rabies
. The predominant diagnostic clinical signs were conjunctival congestion, glazed eyes and idiopathic
ataxia
. Postmortem examination was performed on two dogs.
Rabies
was confirmed by the finding of Negri bodies in brain smears and by the mouse inoculation test (MIT).
...
PMID:Dumb (paralytic) rabies in dogs in Nigeria. 375 51
A mouse model for the study of postexposure prophylaxis of
rabies
was established. Mice injected intramuscularly with a street strain of
rabies
virus were significantly protected from death by five daily 0.2-ml doses of inactivated
rabies
vaccine of chick embryo cell culture origin initiated immediately or 3 hr after infection. In these mice, a large amount of circulating interferon was induced as early as 1 hr after the first dose of vaccine and lasted until at least 12 hr but no such amount of interferon was induced by additional doses of vaccine. Serum antibody was first detected in the mice on day 6. It was noted that some of the surviving mice manifested an
ataxia
or paralysis of the legs. Increasing mortality rates were shown in mice treated with decreasing doses of the vaccine. Passive protection tests using concentrated IgG and IgM antibodies with equivalent neutralization titers showed that IgG antibody gave total protection when given 24 hr before the infection, while it was almost totally ineffective in reducing the mortality when given 2 days or more after infection. IgM antibody did not protect the mice even when given 24 hr before infection. These results suggest that interferon production is more important than antibody production in the initial stages of protection by postexposure vaccination. However, the mechanisms of postexposure prophylaxis in this model could not be explained only by the interferon produced by the vaccine and the possible contributions of additional mechanisms were suggested.
...
PMID:A mouse model of the pathogenesis and postexposure prophylaxis of rabies. 616 50
On July 28, 1995, the South Dakota Public Health Laboratory diagnosed
rabies
in an 8-week-old puppy; on July 23, the puppy had had onset of neurologic signs (e.g., head tilt,
ataxia
, and somnolence) that culminated in seizures, and the puppy was euthanized. A clinically normal littermate owned by a neighboring family was euthanized on July 31 and tested positive for
rabies
. This report summarizes the epidemiologic investigation and follow-up management by the South Dakota Department of Health (SDDH), with assistance from CDC, of persons and domestic animals potentially exposed to
rabies
.
...
PMID:Animal rabies--South Dakota, 1995. 859 30
Twelve naive and nine test-vaccinated horses which developed clinical signs of
rabies
as a result of the required protocol of a vaccine trial were prospectively observed. Nineteen of the 21 cases were confirmed positive for
rabies
infection of the brain by fluorescent antibody test. The two horses with negative results had ganglioneuritis of the trigeminal ganglion or lymphocytic perivascular cuffing in the brain stem in addition to clinical signs. Average incubation period was 12.3 days and average morbidity was 5.5 days. Naive animals had significantly shorter incubation and morbidity periods (P < 0.05). Muzzle tremors were the most frequently observed (81%) and most common initial sign. Other common signs were pharyngeal spasm or pharyngeal paresis (71%),
ataxia
or paresis (71%), lethargy or somnolence (71%). The furious form was manifested in 43% of rabid horses and some of these furious animals initially manifested the dumb form. The paralytic form was not observed. Histopathology was characteristics for
rabies
. The results of this trial do not reflect on the efficacy of commercially licensed equine
rabies
vaccines.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation of experimentally induced rabies in horses. 877 9
An experimental model of
rabies
was established in the fruit-eating bat species Artibeus jamaicensis. The infections caused by CVS-N2c and CVS-B2c, which are both stable variants of CVS-24, were compared after inoculation of adult bats in the right masseter muscle. CVS-N2c produced neurologic signs of
rabies
with paresis,
ataxia
, and inability to fly, while CVS-B2c did not produce neurologic signs. Bats were sacrificed and the distribution of
rabies
virus antigen was assessed in tissue sections with immunoperoxidase staining. Both viruses spread to the brain stem and bilaterally to the trigeminal ganglia by days 2 to 3. CVS-N2c had disseminated widely in the central nervous system (CNS) by day 4 and had involved the spinal cord, thalamus, cerebellum, and cerebral cortex. CVS-B2c had infected neurons in the spinal cord on day 5 and in the cerebellum, thalamus, and cerebral cortex on day 6. Infected pyramidal neurons of the hippocampus were observed on day 5 in CVS-N2c infection, but infected neurons were never noted in the hippocampus in CVS-B2c infection. CVS-N2c infected many more neurons and more prominently involved neuronal processes than CVS-B2c. CVS-N2c spread more efficiently in the CNS than CVS-B2c. Morphologic changes of apoptosis or biochemical evidence of DNA fragmentation were not observed in neurons with either virus after this route of inoculation. The different neurovirulent properties of these CVS variants in this model were not related to their in vivo ability to induce apoptosis.
...
PMID:Experimental rabies virus infection in Artibeus jamaicensis bats with CVS-24 variants. 1170 83
During 1999-2003, 127 cases of raccoon variant
rabies
were reported in raccoons (Procyon lotor) and striped skunks (Mephitis mephitis) in Ontario, Canada. Raccoons accounted for 98% (125/127) of the reported cases with behaviors/conditions including aggression, fighting with dogs,
ataxia
, vocalizations, appearance of being sick, and the presence of porcupine (Erethizon dorsatum) quills. Seventy-eight percent of the rabid raccoons were adults. Juveniles were underrepresented (22%) compared with the adult/juvenile ratios found in nonrabid Ontario raccoon populations. Of the known aged raccoons, 83% were < or = 3 yr of age, and 22% of the rabid adult female raccoons had evidence of having had a litter during the year in which they were found to be rabid. The majority of rabid raccoons were reported during the fall, winter, and spring, suggesting a relationship between raccoon behavioral activities such as denning and breeding and the timing of
rabies
outbreaks. Multiple cases of raccoon
rabies
occurred at several barns, suggesting that those structures serve as focal points of
rabies
transmission as a result of denning activities. Movements of five rabid raccoons (range 1,564-4,143 m) were not different from movements of nonrabid raccoons in Ontario. Sixty-six percent of the rabid animals were submitted by government staff, stressing the importance of those agencies in
rabies
control and surveillance operations. Increased knowledge of the behaviors of rabid raccoons should assist in the development of management strategies for
rabies
.
...
PMID:Behavior, movements, and demographics of rabid raccoons in Ontario, Canada: management implications. 1709 90
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