16 results on '"Trogu, Tiziana"'
Search Results
2. Detection and molecular analysis of Pseudorabies virus from free-ranging Italian wolves (Canis lupus italicus) in Italy - a case report.
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Moreno, Ana, Musto, Carmela, Gobbi, Marco, Maioli, Giulia, Menchetti, Marika, Trogu, Tiziana, Paniccià, Marta, Lavazza, Antonio, and Delogu, Mauro
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WOLVES ,WILD boar ,AUJESZKY'S disease virus ,WILD boar hunting ,HUNTING dogs ,NEUROLOGICAL disorders ,EPILEPSY - Abstract
Background: The only natural hosts of Pseudorabies virus (PRV) are members of the family Suidae (Sus scrofa scrofa). In mammals, the infection is usually fatal and typically causes serious neurologic disease. This study describes four Aujeszky's disease cases in free-ranging Italian wolves (Canis lupus italicus). In Italy, the wolf is a strictly protected species and is in demographic expansion. Case presentation: Three wolves (Wolf A, B, and C) were found in a regional park in Northern Italy, and one (Wolf D) was found in Central Italy. Wolf A and D were alive at the time of the finding and exhibited a fatal infection with epileptic seizures and dyspnoea, dying after a few hours. Wolf B presented scratching lesions under the chin and a detachment of the right earlobe, whilst Wolf C was partially eaten. The wolves showed hepatic congestion, diffuse enteritis, moderate pericardial effusion, severe bilateral pneumonia, and diffuse hyperaemia in the brain. The diagnostic examinations included virological analyses and detection of toxic molecules able to cause serious neurological signs. All four wolves tested positive for pseudorabies virus (PrV). The analysed sequences were placed in Italian clade 1, which is divided into two subclades, "a" and "b". The sequences of Wolf A, B, and C were closely related to other Italian sequences in the subclade b, originally obtained from wild boars and hunting dogs. The sequence from Wolf D was located within the same clade and was closely related to the French hunting dog sequences belonging to group 4. Conclusion: Results showed the presence of PrV strains currently circulating in wild boars and free-ranging Italian wolves. The genetic characterisation of the PrV UL44 sequences from the four wolves confirmed the close relationship with the sequences from wild boars and hunting dogs. This fact supports a possible epidemiological link with the high PrV presence in wild boars and the possibility of infection in wolves through consumption of infected wild boar carcasses or indirect transmission. To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first detection of Pseudorabies virus in free-ranging Italian wolves in northern and central Italy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Spatiotemporal Distribution of Salmonella enterica in European Hedgehogs in Northern Italy.
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Carrera, Maya, Tolini, Clara, Trogu, Tiziana, Boscarino, Andrea, Tranquillo, Vito, Munari, Martina, Callegari, Emanuele, Tartari, Davide, Moreno, Ana, and Rubini, Silva
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SALMONELLA enterica serovar enteritidis ,SALMONELLA ,HEDGEHOGS ,SALMONELLA enterica ,ANIMAL species - Abstract
Growing attention is being given to the European hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus) because of its synanthropic behaviour and its potential role in harbouring parasites, viruses, fungi and bacteria and disseminating them to several animals and humans. Salmonella are the most frequently detected zoonotic bacteria that hedgehogs could transmit through contaminating water and food sources with faeces. This study aimed to determine the prevalence and distribution of Salmonella spp. in wild hedgehogs in the Emilia-Romagna region (northern Italy). From 2019 to 2022, 212 European hedgehogs that died naturally were tested for Salmonella spp. through culture isolation. Positive samples were subjected to serological typing. A total of 82 samples tested positive for Salmonella spp., with the overall Bayesian posterior estimated prevalence ranging from 35% (95% CI: 23–47%) to a maximum of 45% (95% CI: 31–59%) during the years considered and with an overall prevalence calculated at 39% (95% CI: 33–45%). Salmonella enterica Enteritidis and Veneziana were the most prevalent detected serovars in 65% and 17% of the positive samples, respectively. Since 2021, S. Typhimurium, S. Typhimurium Monofasica, S. Zaiman, S. Hessarek, S. Muenster, S. Isangi serovars, S. enterica subsp. Diarizonae and S. enterica subsp. Houtenae have been detected. These findings show a high prevalence of Salmonella spp. in tested hedgehogs, suggesting an important role of this animal species in the epidemiology of potentially zoonotic serovars circulating in the Emilia-Romagna region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Detection and Molecular Characterization of Canine Distemper Virus in Wildlife from Northern Italy.
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Trogu, Tiziana, Castelli, Anna, Canziani, Sabrina, Tolini, Clara, Carrera, Maya, Sozzi, Enrica, Lelli, Davide, Tosi, Giovanni, Fiorentini, Laura, Di Donato, Alessandra, Rugna, Gianluca, Lanci, Danilo, Lavazza, Antonio, and Moreno, Ana
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CANINE distemper virus ,RED fox ,AMINO acid analysis ,OLD World badger ,FOXES ,COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
Canine distemper virus (CDV) is a fatal, highly contagious disease found in wild and domestic carnivores. Several outbreaks have occurred in wildlife in Italy in recent years. This study aims to detect CDV in wildlife following the increasing mortality of foxes (Vulpes vulpes) in the Emilia-Romagna region (northern Italy) observed in 2021. Sixty-seven foxes and one badger (Meles meles) were subjected to necropsy followed by histological examination and were analyzed with molecular techniques to detect the presence of CDV. Of the tested animals, 16% (nine foxes and one badger) were positive for CDV. Phylogenetic analysis showed two different lineages based on complete H gene sequences. The Europe/South America-1 lineage was detected in one fox from Modena, which resembled the CDV variant associated with a previous outbreak in northern Italy in 2018, while the European Wildlife lineage was detected in animals from the Rimini province. Amino acid analysis highlighted a Y549H mutation in all sequences collected, which is commonly associated with increased virulence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. SARS-CoV-2 in a Mink Farm in Italy: Case Description, Molecular and Serological Diagnosis by Comparing Different Tests.
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Moreno, Ana, Lelli, Davide, Trogu, Tiziana, Lavazza, Antonio, Barbieri, Ilaria, Boniotti, MariaBeatrice, Pezzoni, Giulia, Salogni, Cristian, Giovannini, Stefano, Alborali, Giovanni, Bellini, Silvia, Boldini, Massimo, Farioli, Marco, Ruocco, Luigi, Bessi, Olivia, Maroni Ponti, Andrea, Di Bartolo, Ilaria, De Sabato, Luca, Vaccari, Gabriele, and Belli, Gabriele
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MOLECULAR diagnosis ,SARS-CoV-2 ,DEAD animals ,FARMS ,ANIMAL sacrifice - Abstract
This study described a SARS-CoV-2 infection in minks on an Italian farm. Surveillance was performed based on clinical examination and a collection of 1879 swabs and 74 sera from dead and live animals. The farm was placed under surveillance for 4.5 months, from the end of July 2020, when a man working on the farm tested positive by RT-PCR, till mid-December 2020 when all the animals were sacrificed. Clinical examination revealed no clinical signs or increased mortality rates attributable to SARS-CoV-2, while diagnostic tests detected only four weak PCR-positive samples, but 100% of sera were positive for SARS-CoV-2 anti-S antibodies. The phylogenetic analysis of two SARS-CoV-2 sequences from two minks and the sequence of the worker showed that they belonged to different clades. It could be therefore assumed that two distinct introductions of the virus occurred on the farm, and that the first introduction probably occurred before the start of the surveillance period. From the data collected, and especially from the detection of specific antibodies through the combination of different tests, it can be postulated that syndromic surveillance combined with genome detection by PCR may not be sufficient to achieve a diagnosis in asymptomatic animals. In particular, the serological approach, especially when using tests directed towards the S protein, may be useful for improving the traceability of virus circulation in similar environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Recombination between non-structural and structural genes as a mechanism of selection in lagoviruses: The evolutionary dead-end of an RHDV2 isolated from European hare.
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Cavadini, Patrizia, Trogu, Tiziana, Velarde, Roser, Lavazza, Antonio, and Capucci, Lorenzo
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EUROPEAN rabbit , *HARES , *LAGOMORPHA , *GENES , *VIRAL tropism , *HEPATITIS E virus , *ENTEROVIRUSES ,RABBIT diseases - Abstract
• RHDV2_Bg12 originated in a hare through recombination at the RdP-VP60 junction. • Structural genes come from RHDV2, the non-structural ones from a new hare lagovirus. • Rabbits orally inoculated with RHDV2_Bg12 neither developed RHD nor seroconverted. • RHDV2_Bg12 has no longer been identified despite active surveillance on lagomorphs. The genus Lagovirus , belonging to the family Caliciviridae, emerged around the 1980s. It includes highly pathogenic species, rabbit hemorrhagic disease virus (RHDV/GI.1) and European brown hare syndrome virus (EBHSV/GII.1), which cause fatal hepatitis, and nonpathogenic viruses with enteric tropism, rabbit calicivirus (RCV/GI.3,4) and hare calicivirus (HaCV/GII.2). Lagoviruses have evolved along two independent genetic lineages: GI (RHDV and RCV) in rabbits and GII (EBHSV and HaCV) in hares. To be emphasized is that genomes of lagoviruses, like other caliciviruses, are highly conserved at RdRp-VP60 junctions, favoring intergenotypic recombination events at this point. The recombination between an RCV (genotype GI.3), donor of non-structural (NS) genes, and an unknown virus, donor of structural (S) genes, likely led to the emergence of a new lagovirus in the European rabbit, called RHDV type 2 (GI.2), identified in Europe in 2010. New RHDV2 intergenotypic recombinants isolated in rabbits in Europe and Australia originated from similar events between RHDV2 (GI.2) and RHDV (GI.1) or RCV (GI.3,4). RHDV2 (GI.2) rapidly spread worldwide, replacing RHDV and showing several lagomorph species as secondary hosts. The recombination events in RHDV2 viruses have led to a number of viruses with very different combinations of NS and S genes. Recombinant RHDV2 with NS genes from hare lineage (GII) was recently identified in the European hare. This study investigated the first RHDV2 (GI.2) identified in Italy in European hare (RHDV2_Bg12), demonstrating that it was a new virus that originated from the recombination between RHDV2, as an S-gene donor and a hare lagovirus, not yet identified but presumably nonpathogenic, as an NS gene donor. When rabbits were inoculated with RHDV2_Bg12, neither deaths nor seroconversions were recorded, demonstrating that RHDV2_Bg12 cannot infect the rabbit. Furthermore, despite intensive and continuous field surveillance, RHDV2_Bg12 has never again been identified in either hares or rabbits in Italy or elsewhere. This result showed that the host specificity of lagoviruses can depend not only on S genes, as expected until today, but potentially also on some species-specific NS gene sequences. Therefore, because RHDV2 (GI.2) infects several lagomorphs, which in turn probably harbor several specific nonpathogenic lagoviruses, the possibility of new speciation, especially in those other than rabbits, is real. RHDV2 Bg_12 demonstrated this, although the attempt apparently failed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Survey on the Presence of Viruses of Economic and Zoonotic Importance in Avifauna in Northern Italy.
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Trogu, Tiziana, Canziani, Sabrina, Salvato, Sara, Tolini, Clara, Grilli, Guido, Chiari, Mario, Farioli, Marco, Alborali, Loris, Gaffuri, Alessandra, Sala, Giovanni, Bianchi, Alessandro, Rosignoli, Carlo, Prati, Paola, Gradassi, Matteo, Sozzi, Enrica, Lelli, Davide, Lavazza, Antonio, and Moreno, Ana
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NEWCASTLE disease virus ,WEST Nile virus ,AVIAN influenza A virus ,BATS ,VIRUSES ,INFLUENZA viruses ,INFLUENZA A virus - Abstract
Wild birds play an important role in the circulation and spread of pathogens that are potentially zoonotic or of high economic impact on zootechnical production. They include, for example, West Nile virus (WNV), Usutu virus (USUV), avian influenza virus (AIV), and Newcastle disease virus (NDV), which, despite having mostly an asymptomatic course in wild birds, have a strong impact on public health and zootechnical production. This study investigated the presence of these viruses in several wild bird species from North Italy during the biennium 2019–2020. Wild birds derived from 76 different species belonging to 20 orders. Out of 679 birds, 27 were positive for WNV (lineage 2) with a prevalence of 4%; all birds were negative for USUV; one gull was positive for H13N6 influenza virus, and 12 samples were positive for NDV with a prevalence of 2%. Despite the low prevalence observed, the analyses performed on these species provide further data, allowing a better understanding of the diffusion and evolution of diseases of both economic and zoonotic importance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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8. Canine Distemper Outbreaks in Wild Carnivores in Northern Italy.
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Trogu, Tiziana, Canziani, Sabrina, Salvato, Sara, Bianchi, Alessandro, Bertoletti, Irene, Gibelli, Lucia Rita, Alborali, Giovanni Loris, Barbieri, Ilaria, Gaffuri, Alessandra, Sala, Giovanni, Sozzi, Enrica, Lelli, Davide, Lavazza, Antonio, Moreno, Ana, Helbig, Karla, and Sarker, Subir
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CANINE distemper virus , *CARNIVOROUS animals , *IMMUNOELECTRON microscopy , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *POPULATION dynamics , *VETERINARY autopsy , *PROTEIN conformation - Abstract
Canine distemper (CD) is a fatal, highly contagious disease of wild and domestic carnivores. In the Alpine territory, several outbreaks have occurred in the past few decades within wild populations. This study investigated the presence of canine distemper virus (CDV) infections in wild carnivores in Lombardy, relating to the different circulating genotypes. From 2018 to 2020, foxes, badgers, and martens collected during passive surveillance were subjected to necropsy and histological examination, showing classical signs and microscopic lesions related to CDV. Pools of viscera from each animal were analysed by molecular methods and immunoelectron microscopy. Total prevalences of 39.7%, 52.6%, and 14.3% were recorded in foxes, badgers, and stone martens, respectively. A phylogenetic analysis showed that the sequences obtained belonged to the European 1 lineage and were divided into two different clades (a and b) according to the geographical conformation of alpine valleys included in the study. Clade a was related to the European outbreaks originating from Germany in 2006–2010, while clade b was closely related to the CDV sequences originating from northeastern Italy during the 2011–2018 epidemic wave. Our results suggest that CDV is currently well adapted to wild carnivores, mostly circulating with subclinical manifestations and without severe impact on the dynamics of these populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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9. Hypsugopoxvirus: A Novel Poxvirus Isolated from Hypsugo savii in Italy.
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Lelli, Davide, Lavazza, Antonio, Prosperi, Alice, Sozzi, Enrica, Faccin, Francesca, Baioni, Laura, Trogu, Tiziana, Cavallari, Gian Luca, Mauri, Matteo, Gibellini, Anna Maria, Chiapponi, Chiara, and Moreno, Ana
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VIRAL ecology ,VIRUS diseases ,GENOME size ,POXVIRUSES ,NUCLEOTIDE sequencing ,DNA viruses - Abstract
Interest in bat-related viruses has increased considerably during the last decade, leading to the discovery of a rising number of new viruses in several bat species. Poxviridae are a large, diverse family of DNA viruses that can infect a wide range of vertebrates and invertebrates. To date, only a few documented detections of poxviruses have been described in bat populations on three different continents (America, Africa, and Australia). These viruses are phylogenetically dissimilar and have diverse clinical impacts on their hosts. Herein, we report the isolation, nearly complete genome sequencing, and annotation of a novel poxvirus detected from an insectivorous bat (Hypsugo savii) in Northern Italy. The virus is tentatively named Hypsugopoxvirus (HYPV) after the bat species from which it was isolated. The nearly complete genome size is 166,600 nt and it encodes 161 genes. Genome analyses suggest that HYPV belongs to the Chordopoxvirinae subfamily, with the highest nucleotide identity (85%) to Eptesipoxvirus (EPTV) detected from a microbat Eptesicus fuscus in WA, USA, in 2011. To date, HYPV represents the first poxvirus detected in bats in Europe; thus, its viral ecology and disease associations should be investigated further. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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10. Analysis of seroprevalence data on Hepatitis E virus and Toxoplasma gondii in wild ungulates for the assessment of human exposure to zoonotic meat-borne pathogens.
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Crotta, Matteo, Pellicioli, Luca, Gaffuri, Alessandra, Trogu, Tiziana, Formenti, Nicoletta, Tranquillo, Vito, Luzzago, Camilla, Ferrari, Nicola, and Lanfranchi, Paolo
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WILD boar , *MOUFLON , *HEPATITIS E virus , *UNGULATES , *RED deer , *TOXOPLASMA gondii , *ROE deer - Abstract
Seroprevalence data for Toxoplasma gondii and Hepatitis E virus (HEV) in wild boar (Sus scrofa) , roe deer (Capreolus capreolus), red deer (Cervus elaphus), mouflon (Ovis aries/musimon) and chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra) hunted/culled in northern Italy were used to fit seroprevalence distributions describing the exposure and co-exposure of the species to the two pathogens. The higher proportion of T. gondii and HEV seropositive animals was observed in wild boars with point estimate seroprevalence of 49% (N = 331) and 15% (N = 326) respectively. Data allowed comparisons by area (pre-Alpine Vs Alpine environment) for roe deer, red deer and mouflons. Contrasts between the distributions describing the uncertainty in seroprevalence suggest roe deer, red deer and mouflons have higher probability of being seropositive to T. gondii in pre-Alps. When considering HEV, few seropositive animals were detected and contrasts were symmetrically centred to zero for roe deer and red deer; mouflons shown higher probability of being seropositive in Alpine environment. HEV seropositive animals also included chamois (P = 5.1%, N = 97) in the Alpine districts, confirming circulation of HEV in remote areas. Evidence of HEV and T. gondii co-exposure was limited except for wild boars where it was observed in 30 samples representing 60% of the overall HEV-positive samples. Seroprevalence data of single infection and co-infection are extremely useful to investigate circulation of zoonotic pathogens in wild animals and estimate the foodborne risk of human exposure, however, these type of data do not directly translate into the presence/absence of the pathogen in seropositive and seronegative animals. At benefit of future development of quantitative risk assessments aiming at estimating the risk of human infection/co-infection via consumption of game meat, we developed and made available an online application that allows estimating the probability of the pathogen(s) being present as a function of seroprevalence data. • Co-exposure to T. gondii and HEV was explored in five game species. • Seroprevalence data suggest wild boar meat poses the higher food safety risk to consumers. • A method for use of seroprevalence data in risk assessment models is proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. Isolation of Batborne Neglected Zoonotic Agent Issyk-Kul Virus, Italy.
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Lelli D, Moreno A, Canziani S, Soliani L, Carrera M, Castelli A, Faccin F, Trogu T, Sozzi E, Cavallari GL, Mauri M, Ferrari F, Salogni C, Garbarino C, Chiapponi C, Farioli M, and Lavazza A
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- Animals, Italy epidemiology, Public Health, Chiroptera
- Abstract
We isolated Issyk-Kul virus (ISKV) from a bat sampled from Italy in 2021 and conducted ISKV-specific surveillance in bats collected in Italy during 2017-2023. ISKV circulation among synanthropic and sedentary species of bat, such as Savi's pipistrelle bat (Hypsugo savii) in northern Italy, may have public health implications in this region.
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- 2023
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12. Assessment of the Costs Related to West Nile Virus Monitoring in Lombardy Region (Italy) between 2014 and 2018.
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Defilippo F, Dottori M, Lelli D, Chiari M, Cereda D, Farioli M, Chianese R, Cerioli MP, Faccin F, Canziani S, Trogu T, Sozzi E, Moreno A, Lavazza A, and Restelli U
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- Animals, Birds, Horses, Italy epidemiology, Mosquito Vectors, Culicidae, One Health, West Nile Fever epidemiology, West Nile Fever veterinary, West Nile virus
- Abstract
In Italy, the West Nile Virus surveillance plan considers a multidisciplinary approach to identify the presence of the virus in the environment (entomological, ornithological, and equine surveillance) and to determine the risk of infections through potentially infected donors (blood and organ donors). The costs associated with the surveillance program for the Lombardy Region between 2014 and 2018 were estimated. The costs of the program were compared with a scenario in which the program was not implemented, requiring individual blood donation nucleic acid amplification tests (NAT) to detect the presence of WNV in human samples throughout the seasonal period of vector presence. Considering the five-year period, the application of the environmental/veterinary surveillance program allowed a reduction in costs incurred in the Lombardy Region of 7.7 million EUR. An integrated surveillance system, including birds, mosquito vectors, and dead-end hosts such as horses and humans, can prevent viral transmission to the human population, as well as anticipate the detection of WNV using NAT in blood and organ donors. The surveillance program within a One Health context has given the possibility to both document the expansion of the endemic area of WNV in northern Italy and avoid most of the NAT-related costs.
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- 2022
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13. Mammalian Orthoreovirus (MRV) Is Widespread in Wild Ungulates of Northern Italy.
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Arnaboldi S, Righi F, Filipello V, Trogu T, Lelli D, Bianchi A, Bonardi S, Pavoni E, Bertasi B, and Lavazza A
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- Animals, Animals, Wild classification, Artiodactyla classification, Disease Reservoirs veterinary, Disease Reservoirs virology, Italy epidemiology, Liver virology, Orthoreovirus, Mammalian genetics, Prevalence, RNA, Viral genetics, Serogroup, Animals, Wild virology, Artiodactyla virology, Orthoreovirus, Mammalian isolation & purification
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Mammalian orthoreoviruses (MRVs) are emerging infectious agents that may affect wild animals. MRVs are usually associated with asymptomatic or mild respiratory and enteric infections. However, severe clinical manifestations have been occasionally reported in human and animal hosts. An insight into their circulation is essential to minimize the risk of diffusion to farmed animals and possibly to humans. The aim of this study was to investigate the presence of likely zoonotic MRVs in wild ungulates. Liver samples were collected from wild boar, red deer, roe deer, and chamois. Samples originated from two areas (Sondrio and Parma provinces) in Northern Italy with different environmental characteristics. MRV detection was carried out by PCR; confirmation by sequencing and typing for MRV type 3, which has been frequently associated with disease in pigs, were carried out for positive samples. MRV prevalence was as high as 45.3% in wild boars and 40.6% in red deer in the Sondrio area, with lower prevalence in the Parma area (15.4% in wild boars). Our findings shed light on MRV occurrence and distribution in some wild species and posed the issue of their possible role as reservoir.
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- 2021
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14. Phylodynamic analysis and evaluation of the balance between anthropic and environmental factors affecting IBV spreading among Italian poultry farms.
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Franzo G, Tucciarone CM, Moreno A, Legnardi M, Massi P, Tosi G, Trogu T, Ceruti R, Pesente P, Ortali G, Gavazzi L, and Cecchinato M
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- Animals, Farms, Italy, Chickens virology, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Coronavirus Infections genetics, Coronavirus Infections transmission, Coronavirus Infections veterinary, Genotype, Infectious bronchitis virus genetics, Infectious bronchitis virus pathogenicity, Phylogeny, Poultry Diseases epidemiology, Poultry Diseases genetics, Poultry Diseases transmission
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Infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) control is mainly based on wide vaccine administration. Although effective, its efficacy is not absolute, the viral circulation is not prevented and some side effects cannot be denied. Despite this, the determinants of IBV epidemiology and the factors affecting its circulation are still largely unknown and poorly investigated. In the present study, 361 IBV QX (the most relevant field genotype in Italy) sequences were obtained between 2012 and 2016 from the two main Italian integrated poultry companies. Several biostatistical and bioinformatics approaches were used to reconstruct the history of the QX genotype in Italy and to assess the effect of different environmental, climatic and social factors on its spreading patterns. Moreover, two structured coalescent models were considered in order to investigate if an actual compartmentalization occurs between the two integrated poultry companies and the role of a third "ghost" deme, representative of minor industrial poultry companies and the rural sector. The obtained results suggest that the integration of the poultry companies is an effective barrier against IBV spreading, since the strains sampled from the two companies formed two essentially-independent clades. Remarkably, the only exceptions were represented by farms located in the high densely populated poultry area of Northern Italy. The inclusion of a third deme in the model revealed the likely role of other poultry companies and rural farms (particularly concentrated in Northern Italy) as sources of strain introduction into one of the major poultry companies, whose farms are mainly located in the high densely populated poultry area of Northern Italy. Accordingly, when the effect of different environmental and urban parameters on IBV geographic spreading was investigated, no factor seems to contribute to IBV dispersal velocity, being poultry population density the only exception. Finally, the different viral population pattern observed in the two companies over the same time period supports the pivotal role of management and control strategies on IBV epidemiology. Overall, the present study results stress the crucial relevance of human action rather than environmental factors, highlighting the direct benefits that could derive from improved management and organization of the poultry sector on a larger scale.
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- 2020
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15. Low Serologic Prevalences Suggest Sporadic Infections of Hepatitis E Virus in Chamois ( Rupicapra rupicapra ) and Red Deer ( Cervus elaphus ) in the Italian Alps.
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Trogu T, Ferrari N, Formenti N, Filipello V, Pedrotti L, Viganò R, Lanfranchi P, and Luzzago C
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- Animals, Hepatitis E blood, Hepatitis E epidemiology, Italy epidemiology, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Deer virology, Hepatitis E veterinary, Hepatitis E virus isolation & purification, Rupicapra virology
- Abstract
Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a worldwide public health concern, with an increase in human autochthonous cases in Europe. Although domestic pigs and wild boar ( Sus scrofa ) are the main reservoirs of HEV, the constant expansion of wild ruminants increases the potential for HEV transmission. We investigated HEV infection in chamois ( Rupicapra rupicapra ) and red deer ( Cervus elaphus ) in the Italian Alps using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). We detected HEV antibodies from 2013 to 2015 in both host species, with seroprevalences of 1.2% and 0.8% in chamois and red deer, respectively. All serum samples that were positive to HEV antibodies by ELISA were negative when tested by real-time reverse-transcriptase PCR to detect HEV RNA. The observed low seroprevalence of HEV suggested a sporadic circulation of HEV in the alpine environment, and it was consistent with the low seroprevalence observed in wild boar in the Alps. Our observations supported the role of chamois and red deer as spillover hosts of HEV infections in the Italian Alps.
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- 2020
16. Pathology and Distribution of Trombiculosis in Northern Chamois ( Rupicapra rupicapra rupicapra) in the Italian Alps.
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Salvadori C, Formenti N, Trogu T, Lanfranchi P, Rossi L, Citterio C, Obber F, and Poli A
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- Aging, Animal Distribution, Animals, Female, Italy epidemiology, Male, Trombiculiasis epidemiology, Trombiculiasis parasitology, Rupicapra parasitology, Trombiculiasis veterinary, Trombiculidae
- Abstract
Trombiculosis has been reported in some wild ruminant species. We investigated the occurrence of trombiculosis in the northern chamois ( Rupicapra rupicapra rupicapra) in the Western Italian Alps, and we describe the related histopathologic changes. Superficial scrapes and skin samples were taken from 191 chamois from the Lombardy and Piedmont regions during the hunting season in September-December 2015. Numbers of eosinophils, mast cells, cluster of differentiation (CD)3-, CD79α-, CD68-positive cells were determined on immunohistochemically stained skin sections using a semiautomatic analysis system. Forty (20.9, 40/191) chamois were positive for trombiculid larvae on skin scrapings. Of the positive animals, 15 were from Lombardy and 25 from Piedmont, with similar prevalences. Macroscopic lesions were light with involvement of body regions that had contact with the ground, especially head (pinnae and areas around eyes and mouth) and limbs, where stylostome was easily formed due to thin skin. Histologically, trombiculosis caused a focal moderate dermatitis with epidermal necrosis, thin crusts, and hyperkeratosis. Inflammatory infiltrates were suggestive of a granulomatous reaction centered on a stylostome, formed by mite saliva and necrotic host tissue debris. However, we detected some difference in cutaneous immune response with some chamois showing a prevalent T-cell response and others having an increased B-cell count associated with a higher number of eosinophils, mast cells and a lower number of T cells.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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