Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (myositis)
4,538 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Naturally occurring bovine sarcocystosis caused death and illness in eight dairy heifers. Clinical disease was characterized by cachexia, peripheral lymph node enlargement, and anemia. Increased amounts of serum enzymes and anti-Sarcocystis antibody titers were present in affected animal. Macroscopic findings in two heifers at necropsy included emaciation and serous atrophy. Necropsied heifers (No. 1 and 2) contained different developmental stages of Sarcocystis cruzi; each stage was characterized by specific histopathologic findings. Heifer 1 had vascular endothelial schizonts in various soft tissues, with mild mononuclear cell infiltration, alveolar capillary fibrinous thrombi, and multifocal splenic necrosis. Heifer 2 had developing young S cruzi cysts, in myofibrils of cardiac and skeletal muscles, with a concurrent multifocal degenerative myositis. Marked lymphoid hyperplasia occurred in both heifers.
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PMID:Bovine saccocystosis: patholgic features of naturally occurring infection with Sarcocystis cruzi. 11 89

Sarcosporidiosis was found to be the cause of a severe myositis in 3 fowls in Papua New Guinea and 2 in Australia. This represented 3.8% of a series of fowls examined in Papua New Guinea. The overall prevalence of infection in these birds was 45%. Both epidemiological and experimental evidence suggested that the dog was the definitive host for this particular type of sarcocyst.
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PMID:Pathology produced by, prevalence, of, and probable life-cycle of a species of Sarcocystis in the domestic fowl. 41 27

Musculature from 198 Canadian cattle with suspected lesions of eosinophilic myositis were examined histologically and by pepsin digestion. Sera from 51 of the 198 animals were also examined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for anti-Trichinella antibodies. Viable larvae of Trichinella were not recovered from any of the cattle but one animal from Ontario tested positive for anti-Trichinella antibodies. Histologically, focal and/or diffuse eosinophilic myositis lesions were observed in 149 (75.2%) of the animals studied. Other conditions identified were sarcocystiosis, abscesses, cysticercosis, steatosis, fibrosis, granuloma, lymphosarcoma and necrosis. Sarcocystiosis was identified in 105 of the 198 animals in both normal and affected musculature. The study indicates that trichinosis is not a primary cause of eosinophilic myositis in cattle.
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PMID:Eosinophilic myositis in Canadian cattle. 188 89

Electron microscopy of skeletal muscle biopsy from a case of human sarcocystosis revealed a new cyst type of S. lindemanni. The sarcocyst appeared large having a thick cyst wall with evident septa extending into the cyst and, characteristically, broad branched cauliflower like protrusions extending into the pericystic zone. This cyst type appeared to be highly pathogenic. In addition to the complete myofibrillar lysis of the infected muscle-fibre, there were delamination of the neighbouring myofibres, disruption of the sarcomeric orientation with dearrangement and bending oft he Z bands and loss of the T and L myofibrillar pattern in the pericystic zone. Features of myositis such as the presence of abundant lysosomal structures, myofibrillar disarray and glycogen formations were detected. These cytopathogenic signs were obviously attributed to the structural criterion of the cyst wall. The findings not only invalidate the concept that pathological conditions associated with human sarcocytosis are accidental, but also stress the value of electron microscopy in inducing relevant typing of sarcocysts on basis of their morphologically expressed pathogenic properties.
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PMID:Ultrastructure of the cyst wall of S. lindemanni with pathological correlations. 211 Feb 29

The carcass of a mature cow had numerous, disseminated lesions typical of eosinophilic myositis. To elucidate the nature and possible cause of the lesions, histological sections were examined by light microscopy and selected areas were removed and processed for electron microscopy. The lesions were granulomatous in nature. Each granuloma contained at its centre an intact or ruptured sarcocyst associated with degenerate muscle fibers. Surrounding this was a layer of epithelioid cells and an intense accumulation of inflammatory cells, most of which were eosinophils. The primary cyst wall of the sarcocysts in these granulomas consisted of hair-like protrusions that featured many unusual electron-dense bodies. Sarcocysts with ultrastructures characteristic of Sarcocystis cruzi and Sarcocystis hirsuta were also present in muscle from the same animal, but these sarcocysts lacked any associated cellular responses. The eosinophilic myositis in this case appeared to be associated with sarcocystosis of an unknown species. Possibly, the inflammatory reaction was due to the host-parasite interaction in an unusual host.
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PMID:Association of eosinophilic myositis with an unusual species of Sarcocystis in a beef cow. 311 53

Lesions of sarcocystosis were studied in 14 calves necropsied between seven and 110 days after inoculation with 5000 to 25 million sporocysts of Sarcocystis hirsuta from cats. Calves developed fever, anemia, and diarrhea between 11 and 30 days after inoculation. The development of first generation meronts in arteries of small intestine, mesentery, and mesenteric lymph nodes seven to 25 days after inoculation was associated with vascular occlusion and necrosis of associated tissues. The development of second generation meronts in capillaries of striated muscles 15 to 23 days after inoculation was associated with necrosis, edema, and nonsuppurative myositis in heart and other muscles. Sixty-two days after inoculation lesions were reduced to focal areas of granulomatous inflammation around degenerating sarcocysts in striated muscles, but not in the heart.
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PMID:Clinical sarcocystosis in calves fed Sarcocystis hirsuta sporocysts from cats. 640 68

Fifty, 2-3 month old dairy goats were each vaccinated orally with 10000 sporocysts of Sarcocystis capracanis and 25 age-matched goats served as uninoculated controls. Groups of vaccinated and control goats were challenged with lethal doses of S. capracanis at 95, 113, 205, and 274 days post-vaccination. Vaccinated goats developed subclinical sarcocystosis. Twenty-three vaccinated goats and 1 control goat died of intestinal coccidiosis and bacterial pneumonia, 15-118 days after vaccination. Myositis and degenerating sarcocysts were seen in muscles of goats necropsied at 90-186 days postvaccination. Very few, or no sarcocysts were seen in goats necropsied at 272 and 332 days post-vaccination. Vaccinated goats survived a lethal challenge inoculation indicating persistent protective immunity.
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PMID:Immunity to sarcocystosis: modification of intestinal coccidiosis, and disappearance of sarcocysts in dairy goats. 641 53

A case of generalized eosinophilic myositis with sarcosporidiosis in a Finnish cow is reported. The whole carcass was condemned because of massive changes in skeletal muscles. Cat or man are the final hosts of Sarcocystis bovifelis or Sarcocystis hominis. The aetiology of eosinophilic myositis remains open and so does the question whether sarcosporidiosis has something to do with it.
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PMID:Generalized eosinophilic myositis with sarcosporidiosis in a Finnish cow. 676 23

Sarcocystosis was diagnosed in 41 eighteen-month-old heifers and steers. Clinical signs included anorexia, severe weight loss, nervousness, hypersalivation, lameness, and hair loss on the extremities. Hair loss was noticed especially at the end of the tail, where there was complete loss of the switch, giving the animals a "rat-tail" appearance. Consistent gross changes observed at necropsy of four affected animals included generalized lymphadenopathy, erosions and ulcerations in the oral cavity and esophagus, and severe laminitis. Microscopically, young cysts of Sarcocystis sp were disseminated in the heart, skeletal muscle, and brain. Ultrastructural examination indicated that the cysts were young because they contained metrocytes. Affected animals had moderate to severe nonsuppurative myocarditis and myositis, with focal degeneration of myofibers and infiltration by macrophages, lymphocytes, and plasma cells. Indirect hemagglutination of sera from 19 animals revealed a mean antibody titer of 1:24,000 against Sarcocystis bovicanis antigen. Epidemiologic investigation incriminated resident farm dogs that had been housed in a farm hayloft as the source of infection. Hay contaminated with sporocysts in dog feces was thought to have been fed to the heifers and steers.
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PMID:Sarcocystosis in cattle in Kentucky. 676 74

Clinical sarcocystosis was studied in 37 goats after inoculation with graded doses of sporocysts of Sarcocystis capracanis. Eight uninoculated goats served as controls. Clinical response varied with the dose. Goats inoculated with 10-40 million sporocysts died between 11 and 13 days after inoculation (DAI), from interstitial pneumonia, vasculitis, and necrosis of mesenteric lymph nodes. All goats inoculated with 100,000 or 1 million sporocysts died between 19 and 23 DAI; clinical signs were anorexia, fever (40-41 C), anemia, and weight loss. Four of 4 goats inoculated with 50,000 sporocysts and 1 of 4 inoculated with 10,000 sporocysts died 24, 28, 39, 68, and 61 DAI, respectively. Goats inoculated with 1,000 sporocysts and uninoculated goats remained clinically normal. After day 18 and before day 68, packed cell volume and hemoglobin content decreased to as low as 11% and 3.6 g/dl, respectively. Alanine aminotransferase and lactic dehydrogenase activities were inconsistently increased. Blood urea nitrogen and bilirubin values were increased, reaching as high as 63 mg/dl and 10 mg/dl, respectively. Histologically, thymic atrophy, vasculitis, hepatitis, cholangitis, myocarditis, generalized myositis, and encephalomyelitis were the main microscopic findings. The cause of the anemia in goats that died after day 19 was not determined.
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PMID:Sarcocystosis in goats: clinical signs and pathologic and hematologic findings. 678 65


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