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Query: UMLS:C0013911 (
emaciation
)
1,059
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In order to confirm the clinical and histological diagnosis of
scrapie
and to determine the infectivity titer of the
scrapie
agent in the brain of a naturally infected Suffolk sheep, 123 white Swiss mice were inoculated intracerebrally. From about 13 to 20 months post-inoculation, 28 mice died, and 95 that were sick were killed. In the terminal stages of disease, the mice developed weakness, gradual
emaciation
, posterior ataxia, and occasionally alopecia. The average infection (83%) of mice affected with
scrapie
occurred in groups 1 to 4 inoculated with dilution 10(-1) to 10(-4) of
scrapie
sheep brain. Sixty-seven (54.5%) of the mice developed spongiform lesions and vacuolar degeneration of neurons. Similarities of
scrapie
with other subacute spongiform encephalopathies in animals and humans are discussed.
...
PMID:Experimental scrapie in white Swiss mice. 208 31
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
Between March 1981 and June 1995, a neurological disease characterized histologically by spongiform encephalopathy was diagnosed in 49 free-ranging cervids from northcentral Colorado (USA). Mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) were the primary species affected and accounted for 41 (84%) of the 49 cases, but six Rocky Mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) and two white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) were also affected. Clinical signs included
emaciation
, excessive salivation, behavioral changes, ataxia, and weakness.
Emaciation
with total loss of subcutaneous and abdominal adipose tissue and serous atrophy of remaining fat depots were the only consistent gross findings. Spongiform encephalopathy characterized by microcavitation of gray matter, intraneuronal vacuolation and neuronal degeneration was observed microscopically in all cases.
Scrapie
-associated prion protein or an antigenically indistinguishable protein was demonstrated in brains from 26 affected animals, 10 using an immunohistochemical staining procedure, nine using electron microscopy, and seven using Western blot. Clinical signs, gross and microscopic lesions and ancillary test findings in affected deer and elk were indistinguishable from those reported in chronic wasting disease of captive cervids. Prevalence estimates, transmissibility, host range, distribution, origins, and management implications of spongiform encephalopathy in free-ranging deer and elk remain undetermined.
...
PMID:Spongiform encephalopathy in free-ranging mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus), white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) and Rocky Mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) in northcentral Colorado. 902 85
To determine the transmissibility of chronic wasting disease (CWD) to cattle and to provide information about clinical course, lesions, and suitability of currently used diagnostic procedures for detection of CWD in cattle, 13 calves were inoculated intracerebrally with brain suspension from mule deer naturally affected with CWD. Between 24 and 27 months postinoculation, 3 animals became recumbent and were euthanized. Gross necropsies revealed
emaciation
in 2 animals and a large pulmonary abscess in the third. Brains were examined for protease-resistant prion protein (PrP(res)) by immunohistochemistry and Western blotting and for
scrapie
-associated fibrils (SAFs) by negative-stain electron microscopy. Microscopic lesions in the brain were subtle in 2 animals and absent in the third case. However, all 3 animals were positive for PrP(res) by immunohistochemistry and Western blot, and SAFs were detected in 2 of the animals. An uninoculated control animal euthanized during the same period did not have PrP(res) in its brain. These are preliminary observations from a currently in-progress experiment. Three years after the CWD challenge, the 10 remaining inoculated cattle are alive and apparently healthy. These preliminary findings demonstrate that diagnostic techniques currently used for bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) surveillance would also detect CWD in cattle should it occur naturally.
...
PMID:Preliminary findings on the experimental transmission of chronic wasting disease agent of mule deer to cattle. 1124 74
There were 574
scrapie
positive suspects (histopathological
scrapie
lesions present) and 198
scrapie
negative suspects (histopathological
scrapie
lesions absent). The greatest number of
scrapie
cases were recorded in sheep of 2, 3 and 4 years of age which represented 17%, 36% and 23% of the
scrapie
positive suspects, respectively. The sign sensitivities and specificities for the ten recorded signs were, respectively: pruritus (62%, 42%), ataxia (23%, 74%), hyperaesthesia (32%, 74%), wool loss (25%, 73%), fleece discolouration (29%, 85%), bruxism (23%, 69%), nibbling reflex (17%, 58%), head rubbing (47%, 78%), poll rubbing (25%, 83%). These single signs had poor discriminatory values with likelihood ratios close to one (range 0.89-1.21); combinations of the four signs, pruritus, wool loss, ataxia, hyperaesthesia and
emaciation
were more discriminatory (range 0.30-4.3). This study covered a time period when bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) might have been introduced into the sheep population on the Shetland Islands via contaminated feed. No temporal changes could be detected in the age structure of the affected animals.
...
PMID:The Shetland Islands scrapie monitoring and control programme: analysis of the clinical data collected from 772 scrapie suspects 1985-1997. 1604 48
Small ruminants infected with
scrapie
show a large range of often unspecific clinical symptoms. The most-often described signs, locomotion, sensibility and behavioural disorders and
emaciation
, rarely occur together, and cases have been described in which only one of those signs was detectable.Thus, formulating a well-circumscribed definition of a clinical suspect case is difficult. Most animals with CNS-effecting diseases such as listeriosis, polioencephalomacia, cerebrospinal nematidiasis and enterotoxemia will, in a thorough neurological examination, show at least some
scrapie
-like symptoms. Among the 22 neurological field cases examined in this study, a goat with cerebral gliomatosis and hair lice showed the closest similarity to clinical
scrapie
. The unilateral deficiency of the cerebral nerves has potential as an clinical exclusion criterion for
scrapie
. However, the laboratory confirmation--or exclusion--of
scrapie
remains important. It thus needs to be realized that a consistent and thorough examination of neurologically diseased small ruminants (including fallen stock) is the backbone of a good surveillance system for these diseases. This should be a motivation for submitting adult sheep and goats for neuropathological examination.
...
PMID:[Swiss scrapie surveillance. I. Clinical aspects of neurological diseases in sheep and goats]. 1625 8