1 / 20

Case 2010-9

Case 2010-9. WELCOME TO A PARALLEL UNIVERSE: VETERINARY MEDICINE. VETERINARY MEDICINE AND MEDICINE. Some things in common, some things different CLINICAL DISORDERS VETERINARY JOURNALS Muscular dystrophy Veterinary Pathology Rheumatoid arthritis Journal of Comparative Pathology

jerica
Download Presentation

Case 2010-9

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Case 2010-9 • WELCOME • TO A • PARALLEL UNIVERSE: • VETERINARY MEDICINE

  2. VETERINARY MEDICINE AND MEDICINE • Some things in common, some things different • CLINICAL DISORDERSVETERINARY JOURNALS • Muscular dystrophy Veterinary Pathology • Rheumatoid arthritis Journal of Comparative Pathology • Motor neuron disease Veterinary Radiology & Ultrasound • Cardiomyopathy Veterinary Dermatology • Glaucoma Veterinary Ophthalmology • Pemphigus Equine Veterinary Journal • Polymyositis Feline Medicine and Surgery • Diabetes mellitus Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica

  3. Case 2010-9 • CASE SUMMARY • domestic cats (most female) on a study • 42/45 developed signs of spinal cord disease • (not an investigation of neurologic disease) • severity of signs varied • post mortem examinations: • Institution A • Cornell • Material submitted: 1. H&E section of the spinal cord

  4. 2010-9

  5. 2010-9

  6. LFBCEV GFAP

  7. LFBCEV

  8. BIELSCHOWSKY

  9. LECTIN sWGA IDENTIFIES THE MACROPHAGES

  10. TWO QUESTIONS 1. Morphologic diagnosis 2. Etiology

  11. TWO QUESTIONS • Morphologic diagnosis – spinal cord leukomyelopathy • The etiology involves irradiation – what was irradiated?

  12. TWO QUESTIONS • Morphologic diagnosis – spinal cord leukomyelopathy • The etiology involves irradiation – what was irradiated? • The food. • This feline leukomyelopathy is caused by the consumption of • dry food that has been irradiated.

  13. LEUKOMYELOPATHY (LM) IN CATS • Year seen or Where Number of • published clinical cases • …………………………………………………………………………. • 1996 USA (Cornell) 42 (F) • 2007 UK/Ireland 190 (M&F) • 2009 USA (Wisconsin) ? (F) • 2009 Australia 87 (M&F) • ………………………………………………………………………….. • SUMMARY • Male and female cats • 3 mo to 15 yr of age • Most domestic breed; few Siamese, Burmese, etc • (apparently not a common ancestry)

  14. WHY IRRADIATE FOOD? • To prevent contamination of a specific-pathogen-free environment. • To reduce microbiological contamination and so prevent spoilage • and increase shelf life. • WHAT DOES IRRADIATION DO? • Gamma irradiation results (among other effects) in the production of • ions and free radicals which can kill or damage pathogenic organisms • in food. • This reduces the use of fungicides, other chemicals, etc.

  15. GAMMA IRRADIATION OF FOOD • Cat • Routine: (one lab) 36.3-47.3 kGy • Experimental LM: low dose 25.7-38.1 kGy • high dose 38.1-53.6 kGy • Man [40 years] • Routine: 1-10 kGy • Some foods (eg dried herbs, spices) to 30kGy • (Child et al. 2009)

  16. “INCUBATION PERIOD OF LM”First ingestion to onset of neurologic disease • Spontaneous cases: about 4 months • 2.5 – 6 months • Experimental cases: 140 – 174 days (~4.5 – 6mo)

  17. Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 235:355, 2009.

  18. FINAL QUESTION • Are there implications • for other species?

  19. THE ROYAL VETERINARYCOLLEGE, LONDON, UK

More Related