959 results on '"Roccabianca A"'
Search Results
52. Long-term survival in a cat with tonsillar squamous cell carcinoma treated with surgery and chemotherapy
- Author
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Elisabetta Treggiari, Giorgio Romanelli, Silvia Ferro, and Paola Roccabianca
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Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
Case summary A 13-year-old neutered female domestic shorthair cat was presented for further investigation of a right-sided cervical mass. Oral cavity examination revealed a unilateral, right tonsillar mass. Following a contrast-enhanced CT scan of head, thorax and abdomen, which showed no clear evidence of distant metastasis, cytology of the cervical mass was consistent with a metastatic retropharyngeal lymph node, and the patient underwent tonsillectomy and lymphadenectomy. The tumour was histopathologically confirmed to be a well-differentiated squamous cell carcinoma with lymph node metastasis, and sequential chemotherapy treatments with carboplatin were administered. The cat underwent a second surgery to treat local recurrence and chemotherapy was continued. Subsequently, multiple lymphadenectomies to remove additional metastatic lymph nodes were performed, followed by adjuvant treatment with doxorubicin. Restaging procedures, performed every 3-6 months did not document any local recurrence nor any local or distant metastasis. The patient was euthanased after developing neoplastic pleural effusion 965 days following tonsillectomy. Relevance and novel information Tonsillar tumours are rare in cats, but clinical presentation can be similar to that in dogs. Treatment with surgery and chemotherapy, and more importantly multiple lymphadenectomies, may delay the onset of distant metastasis and it should be considered in similar cases to possibly prolong survival.
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- 2021
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53. Detection of Leishmania spp. in Chronic Dermatitis: Retrospective Study in Exposed Horse Populations
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Alessia Libera Gazzonis, Giulia Morganti, Ilaria Porcellato, Paola Roccabianca, Giancarlo Avallone, Stefano Gavaudan, Cristina Canonico, Giulia Rigamonti, Chiara Brachelente, and Fabrizia Veronesi
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Leishmania ,horse ,chronic dermatitis ,skin biopsies ,Medicine - Abstract
Leishmania infantum is a protozoan causing human zoonotic visceral leishmaniasis (ZVL) and visceral–cutaneous canine leishmaniosis (CanL) in the Mediterranean Basin. L. infantum is able to infect a large number of wild and domestic species, including cats, dogs, and horses. Since the 1990s, clinical cases of equine leishmaniasis (EL), typically characterized by cutaneous forms, have been increasingly diagnosed worldwide. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the presence of clinical forms of EL in CanL-endemic areas in Italy, where exposure of equine populations was ascertained from recent serological surveys. For this purpose, formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded skin biopsies of 47 horses presenting chronic dermatitis compatible with EL were retrospectively selected for the study and subjected to conventional and q-PCR. A singular positivity for L. infantum was found; BLAST analysis of sequence amplicons revealed a 99–100% homology with L. infantum sequences. The histological examination revealed a nodular lymphoplasmacytic and histiocytic infiltrate; immunohistochemistry showed rare macrophages containing numerous positive amastigotes. The present retrospective study reports, for the first time, a case of a cutaneous lesion by L. infantum occurring in an Italian horse. Pathological and healthy skin samples should be investigated on a larger scale to provide information on the potential clinical impact of EL in the practice, and to define the role of horses in epidemiological ZVL and CanL scenarios.
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- 2022
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54. A Wide-Proteome Analysis to Identify Molecular Pathways Involved in Kidney Response to High-Fat Diet in Mice
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Elena Dozio, Elisa Maffioli, Elena Vianello, Simona Nonnis, Francesca Grassi Scalvini, Leonardo Spatola, Paola Roccabianca, Gabriella Tedeschi, and Massimiliano Marco Corsi Romanelli
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cardiometabolic risk ,fibrosis ,high-fat diet ,kidney ,lipids ,obesity ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
The etiopathogenesis of obesity-related chronic kidney disease (CKD) is still scarcely understood. To this aim, we assessed the effect of high-fat diet (HF) on molecular pathways leading to organ damage, steatosis, and fibrosis. Six-week-old male C57BL/6N mice were fed HF diet or normal chow for 20 weeks. Kidneys were collected for genomic, proteomic, histological studies, and lipid quantification. The main findings were as follows: (1) HF diet activated specific pathways leading to fibrosis and increased fatty acid metabolism; (2) HF diet promoted a metabolic shift of lipid metabolism from peroxisomes to mitochondria; (3) no signs of lipid accumulation and/or fibrosis were observed, histologically; (4) the early signs of kidney damage seemed to be related to changes in membrane protein expression; (5) the proto-oncogene MYC was one of the upstream transcriptional regulators of changes occurring in protein expression. These results demonstrated the potential usefulness of specific selected molecules as early markers of renal injury in HF, while histomorphological changes become visible later in obesity-related CDK. The integration of these information with data from biological fluids could help the identification of biomarkers useful for the early detection and prevention of tissue damage in clinical practice.
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- 2022
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55. Identification of Altered miRNAs in Cerumen of Dogs Affected by Otitis Externa
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Cristina Lecchi, Valentina Zamarian, Giorgia Borriello, Giorgio Galiero, Guido Grilli, Mario Caniatti, Elisa Silvia D'Urso, Paola Roccabianca, Roberta Perego, Michela Minero, Sara Legnani, Raffaele Calogero, Maddalena Arigoni, and Fabrizio Ceciliani
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otitis externa ,dogs ,miRNA ,sequencing ,biomarkers ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Otitis externa is one of the most common diseases in dogs. It is associated with bacteria and yeast, which are regarded as secondary causes. Cerumen is a biological substance playing an important role in the protection of ear skin. The involvement of cerumen in immune defense is poorly understood. MicroRNAs can modulate the host immune response and can provide promising biomarkers for several inflammatory and infectious disorder diagnosis. The aims of this study were to profile the cerumen miRNA signature associated with otitis externa in dogs, integrate miRNAs to their target genes related to immune functions, and investigate their potential use as biomarkers. Cerumen was collected from healthy and otitis affected dogs and the expression of miRNAs was profiled by Next Generation Sequencing; the validation of the altered miRNAs was performed using RT-qPCR. The potential ability of miRNAs to modulate immune-related genes was investigated using bioinformatics tools. The results pointed out that 32 miRNAs, of which 14 were up- and 18 down-regulated, were differentially expressed in healthy vs. otitis-affected dogs. These results were verified by RT-qPCR. To assess the diagnostic value of miRNAs, ROC analysis was carried out, highlighting that 4 miRNAs are potential biomarkers to discriminate otitis-affected dogs. Bioinformatics showed that cerumen miRNAs may be involved in the modulation of host immune response. In conclusion, we have demonstrated for the first time that miRNAs can be efficiently extracted and quantified from cerumen, that their profile changes between healthy and otitis affected dogs, and that they may serve as potential biomarkers. Further studies are necessary to confirm their diagnostic value and to investigate their interaction with immune-related genes.
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- 2020
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56. Cerumen microbial community shifts between healthy and otitis affected dogs.
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Giorgia Borriello, Rubina Paradiso, Carlotta Catozzi, Roberta Brunetti, Paola Roccabianca, Marita Georgia Riccardi, Bianca Cecere, Cristina Lecchi, Giovanna Fusco, Fabrizio Ceciliani, and Giorgio Galiero
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Otitis externa is a common multifactorial disease in dogs, characterized by broad and complex modifications of the ear microbiota. The goal of our study was to describe the ear cerumen microbiota of healthy dogs, within the same animal and between different animals, and to compare the cerumen microbiota of otitis affected dogs with that of healthy animals. The present study included 26 healthy dogs, 16 animals affected by bilateral otitis externa and 4 animals affected by monolateral otitis externa. For each animal cerumen samples from the right and left ear were separately collected with sterile swabs, and processed for DNA extraction and PCR amplification of the 16S rRNA gene. Amplicon libraries were sequenced using an Ion Torrent Personal Genome Machine (PGM), and taxonomical assignment and clustering were performed using QIIME 2 software. Our results indicate that the bacterial community of the cerumen in healthy dogs was characterized by extensive variability, with the most abundant phyla represented by Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes and Fusobacteria. The analysis of both alpha and beta diversity between pairs of left and right ear samples from the same dog within the group of affected animals displayed higher differences than between paired samples across healthy dogs. Moreover we observed reduced bacterial richness in the affected group as compared with controls and increased variability in population structure within otitis affected animals, often associated with the proliferation of a single bacterial taxon over the others. Moreover, Staphylococcus and Pseudomonas resulted to be the bacterial genera responsible for most distances between the two groups, in association with differences in the bacterial community structure. The cerumen microbiota in healthy dogs exhibits a complex bacterial population which undergoes significant modifications in otitis affected animals.
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- 2020
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57. Veterinary dermatopathology: A growing discipline
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Affolter, Verena, primary, Bradley, Charles, additional, McMahill, Barbara, additional, Mansell, Joanne, additional, and Roccabianca, Paola, additional
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- 2023
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58. A New Function for Perivascular Adipose Tissue (PVAT): Assistance of Arterial Stress Relaxation
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Watts, Stephanie W., Flood, Emma D., Garver, Hannah, Fink, Gregory D., and Roccabianca, Sara
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- 2020
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59. Primary intranasal perivascular wall tumors in 2 cats
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Francesco Godizzi, Giancarlo Avallone, Gabriele Ghisleni, Silvia Dell’Aere, Clarissa Zamboni, Paola Valenti, and Paola Roccabianca
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General Veterinary ,intranasal ,PDGFRβ ,nasal ,Soft Tissue Neoplasms ,glomangiopericytoma ,Glomus Tumor ,Cat Diseases ,Immunohistochemistry ,Dogs ,cats ,hemangiopericytoma ,immunohistochemistry ,perivascular wall tumor ,sinonasal hemangiopericytoma-like tumor ,solitary fibrous tumor ,Cats ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Animals ,Humans ,Dog Diseases ,Settore VET/03 - Patologia Generale e Anatomia Patologica Veterinaria ,Settore VET/08 - Clinica Medica Veterinaria ,Hemangiopericytoma - Abstract
Perivascular wall tumors (PWTs) are common well-known canine mesenchymal tumors. The term PWT has not yet been applied to cats; only 2 cases of feline soft tissue hemangiopericytomas (HEPs) are available. In human medicine, sinonasal HEP-like tumor/glomangiopericytoma (SHPCL/GP) and intranasal solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) are well-known mesenchymal tumors with staghorn vasculature and low malignant potential; however, these entities have not been described in small animals. We describe here the pathologic and immunohistochemical features of 2 cases of feline intranasal mesenchymal tumors consistent with PWTs and resembling human SHPCL/GP (case 1), and human intranasal SFT (case 2). Both cats developed intranasal, unilateral, polypoid, expansile neoplasms with a mostly patternless growth of spindle cells, minimal stroma, and prominent staghorn vessels. The stroma was PAS negative, which excludes a glomus tumor. Immunohistochemistry identified diffuse vimentin and PDGFRβ expression. Case 1 was α-SMA positive (as is human SHPCL/GP); case 2 was negative (as is human intranasal SFT). Both tumors were incompletely excised, leading to recurrence in case 1. Case 2 was lost to follow up. To our knowledge, intranasal PWTs have not been reported previously in cats. The frequency of the lesions is not known, but awareness of these entities may assist in their recognition and better characterization in the future.
- Published
- 2022
60. Causes of Death in Stray Cat Colonies of Milan: A Five-Year Report
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Valeria Grieco, Paola Crepaldi, Chiara Giudice, Paola Roccabianca, Giuseppe Sironi, Eleonora Brambilla, Sonia Magistrelli, Giuliano Ravasio, Federico Granatiero, Anna Invernizzi, and Mario Caniatti
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cat ,colony cats ,stray cats ,causes of death ,trauma ,feline panleukopenia ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
The presence of cats in urban environments has a long history. In Italy, stray cats are protected by national and regional laws, and programs of neutering and reintroduction to colonies are ongoing. Colony cats have been widely studied from a behavioral perspective, while surveys regarding their causes of death are limited, although they may provide relevant information related to public health and cat welfare. This retrospective study provides pathological descriptions and statistical analyses of the causes of death of 186 cats from 100 colonies in the city of Milan. Inflammatory processes represent the primary cause of death (37.7%) and include common feline infectious diseases such as feline panleukopenia (67.5%), particularly in kittens, and feline infectious peritonitis (32.5%), most common in adult cats. Trauma was found to be a common cause of death of young/adult cats (14%) with a generally good body condition, while severe parasitosis was less represented (2.6%). The death of old cats was statistically associated with organ failure (24.7%), particularly renal failure, and tumors (11.8%). Knowledge of the most common causes of death of colony cats could make an important contribution to the health monitoring of these cats and sanitary control of their habitats and provide information on possible related emerging animal welfare concerns.
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- 2021
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61. A Data-Driven Memory-Dependent Modeling Framework for Anomalous Rheology: Application to Urinary Bladder Tissue
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Jorge L. Suzuki, Tyler G. Tuttle, Sara Roccabianca, and Mohsen Zayernouri
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fractional viscoelasticity ,quasi-linear-viscoelasticity ,urinary bladder rheology ,data-driven model selection ,power-law relaxation ,Thermodynamics ,QC310.15-319 ,Mathematics ,QA1-939 ,Analysis ,QA299.6-433 - Abstract
We introduce a data-driven fractional modeling framework for complex materials, and particularly bio-tissues. From multi-step relaxation experiments of distinct anatomical locations of porcine urinary bladder, we identify an anomalous relaxation character, with two power-law-like behaviors for short/long long times, and nonlinearity for strains greater than 25%. The first component of our framework is an existence study, to determine admissible fractional viscoelastic models that qualitatively describe linear relaxation. After the linear viscoelastic model is selected, the second stage adds large-strain effects to the framework through a fractional quasi-linear viscoelastic approach for the nonlinear elastic response of the bio-tissue of interest. From single-step relaxation data of the urinary bladder, a fractional Maxwell model captures both short/long-term behaviors with two fractional orders, being the most suitable model for small strains at the first stage. For the second stage, multi-step relaxation data under large strains were employed to calibrate a four-parameter fractional quasi-linear viscoelastic model, that combines a Scott-Blair relaxation function and an exponential instantaneous stress response, to describe the elastin/collagen phases of bladder rheology. Our obtained results demonstrate that the employed fractional quasi-linear model, with a single fractional order in the range α = 0.25–0.30, is suitable for the porcine urinary bladder, producing errors below 2% without need for recalibration over subsequent applied strains. We conclude that fractional models are attractive tools to capture the bladder tissue behavior under small-to-large strains and multiple time scales, therefore being potential alternatives to describe multiple stages of bladder functionality.
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- 2021
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62. Dermoscopic features of benign sebaceous proliferations in dogs: Description, assessment and inter‐observer agreement.
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Scarampella, Fabia, Colombo, Silvia, Dehesa, Alexandra, Godizzi, Francesco, Cavicchini, Stefano, Fabbri, Elisabetta, and Roccabianca, Paola
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DERMOSCOPY ,SEBACEOUS glands ,VETERINARIANS ,DOGS ,ADENOMA ,HYPERPLASIA - Abstract
Copyright of Veterinary Dermatology is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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63. Surgical Margins in Canine Cutaneous Soft-Tissue Sarcomas: A Dichotomous Classification System Does Not Accurately Predict the Risk of Local Recurrence
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Lavinia Elena Chiti, Roberta Ferrari, Paola Roccabianca, Patrizia Boracchi, Francesco Godizzi, Giuseppe Achille Busca, and Damiano Stefanello
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dog ,sarcoma ,margins ,surgery ,recurrence ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Adjuvant treatments are recommended in dogs with incompletely excised cutaneous soft-tissue sarcoma (STS) to reduce the risk of local recurrence (LR), although guidelines are lacking on how to manage clean but close margins (CbCM). This retrospective study investigates the impact of CbCM on LR of canine STS. Ninety-eight surgically excised canine STS at first presentation were included. Tissue samples were routinely trimmed and analyzed. Cumulative incidence of LR was estimated for each category of margins (tumor-free, infiltrated, CbCM), and included CbCM in the tumor-free and infiltrated category, respectively. The prognostic impact on LR was then adjusted for relevant prognostic factors. Cumulative incidence of LR at three years differed significantly between the three categories (p = 0.016), and was estimated to be 42% with infiltrated margins, 23% with CbCM, 7% with tumor-free margins. Both when CbCM were grouped with infiltrated margins (p = 0.033; HR = 5.05), and when CbCM were grouped with tumor-free margins (p = 0.011; HR = 3.13), a significant difference between groups was found. STS excised with infiltrated margins had the greatest risk of LR. The rate of LR with CbCm was greater than recurrence rate of tumor-free margins. The category CbCM may be considered as a separate prognostic category.
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- 2021
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64. Contribution of left ventricular residual stress by myocytes and collagen: existence of inter-constituent mechanical interaction
- Author
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Grobbel, Marissa R., Shavik, Sheikh Mohammad, Darios , Emma, Watts, Stephanie W., Lee, Lik Chuan, and Roccabianca, Sara
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- 2018
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65. A Nonsense Variant in the ST14 Gene in Akhal-Teke Horses with Naked Foal Syndrome
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Anina Bauer, Theresa Hiemesch, Vidhya Jagannathan, Markus Neuditschko, Iris Bachmann, Stefan Rieder, Sofia Mikko, M. Cecilia Penedo, Nadja Tarasova, Martina Vitková, Nicolò Sirtori, Paola Roccabianca, Tosso Leeb, and Monika M. Welle
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Equus caballus ,dermatology ,skin ,hair ,genodermatosis ,whole genome sequencing ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Naked foal syndrome (NFS) is a genodermatosis in the Akhal-Teke horse breed. We provide the first scientific description of this phenotype. Affected horses have almost no hair and show a mild ichthyosis. So far, all known NFS affected horses died between a few weeks and 3 yr of age. It is not clear whether a specific pathology caused the premature deaths. NFS is inherited as a monogenic autosomal recessive trait. We mapped the disease causing genetic variant to two segments on chromosomes 7 and 27 in the equine genome. Whole genome sequencing of two affected horses, two obligate carriers, and 75 control horses from other breeds revealed a single nonsynonymous genetic variant on the chromosome 7 segment that was perfectly associated with NFS. The affected horses were homozygous for ST14:c.388G>T, a nonsense variant that truncates >80% of the open reading frame of the ST14 gene (p.Glu130*). The variant leads to partial nonsense-mediated decay of the mutant transcript. Genetic variants in the ST14 gene are responsible for autosomal recessive congenital ichthyosis 11 in humans. Thus, the identified equine ST14:c.388G>T variant is an excellent candidate causative variant for NFS, and the affected horses represent a large animal model for a known human genodermatosis. Our findings will enable genetic testing to avoid the nonintentional breeding of NFS-affected foals.
- Published
- 2017
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66. Aortic stiffness is lower when PVAT is included: a novel ex vivo mechanics study
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Tyler Tuttle, Emma Darios, Stephanie W. Watts, and Sara Roccabianca
- Subjects
Male ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Vascular Stiffness ,Adipose Tissue ,Physiology ,Physiology (medical) ,Animals ,Aorta, Thoracic ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Aorta ,Rats ,Research Article - Abstract
Perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT) is increasingly recognized as an essential layer of the functional vasculature, being responsible for producing vasoactive substances and assisting arterial stress relaxation. Here, we test the hypothesis that PVAT reduces aortic stiffness. Our model was the thoracic aorta of the male Sprague–Dawley rat. Uniaxial mechanical tests for three groups of tissue were performed: aorta with PVAT attached (+PVAT) or removed (−PVAT), and isolated PVAT (PVAT only). The output of the mechanical test is reported in the form of a Cauchy stress-stretch curve. This work presents a novel, physiologically relevant approach to measure mechanical stiffness ex vivo in isolated PVAT. Low-stress stiffness (E(0)), high-stress stiffness (E(1)), and the stress corresponding to a stretch of 1.2 (σ(1.2)) were measured as metrics of distensibility. The low-stress stiffness was largest in the −PVAT samples and smallest in PVAT only samples. Both the high-stress stiffness and the stress at 1.2 stretch were significantly higher in −PVAT samples when compared with +PVAT samples. Taken together, these results suggest that −PVAT samples are stiffer (less distensible) both at low stress (not significant) as well as at high stress (significant) when compared with +PVAT samples. These conclusions are supported by the results of the continuum mechanics material model that we also used to interpret the same experimental data. Thus, tissue stiffness is significantly lower when considering PVAT as part of the aortic wall. As such, PVAT should be considered as a target for improving vascular function in diseases with elevated aortic stiffness, including hypertension. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We introduce a novel and physiologically relevant way of measuring perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT) mechanical stiffness which shows that PVAT’s low, yet measurable, stiffness is linearly correlated with the amount of collagen fibers present within the tissue. Including PVAT in the measurement of the aortic wall’s mechanical behavior is important, and it significantly affects the resulting metrics by decreasing aortic stiffness.
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- 2022
67. Compound 48/80 increases bladder wall mechanical compliance via activation of MMP-2
- Author
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Saxena, Pragya, primary, Roccabianca, Sara, additional, and Tykocki, Nathan, additional
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- 2023
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68. Alteration in Mechanical Compliance via Mast Cell Activation in Juvenile and Adult Urinary Bladder
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Saxena, Pragya, primary, Roccabianca, Sara, additional, and Tykcoki, Nathan, additional
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- 2023
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69. Feline injection-site sarcomas (FISSs): could the assessment of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) help in prog-nostic evaluations?
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Porcellato, I., primary, Treggiari, E., additional, Gismondi, V., additional, Di Matteo, I., additional, De Feo, C., additional, Moretti, G., additional, Roccabianca, P., additional, Lepri, E., additional, Sforna, M., additional, and Brachelente, C., additional
- Published
- 2023
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70. Influences of sodium and glycosaminoglycans on skin oedema and the potential for ulceration: a finite-element approach
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Wu Pan, Sara Roccabianca, Marc D. Basson, and Tamara Reid Bush
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venous ulcers ,stasis ulcers ,finite element ,inflammation ,glycosaminoglycans ,sodium ,Science - Abstract
Venous ulcers are chronic transcutaneous wounds common in the lower legs. They are resistant to healing and have a 78% chance of recurrence within 2 years. It is commonly accepted that venous ulcers are caused by the insufficiency of the calf muscle pump, leading to blood pooling in the lower legs, resulting in inflammation, skin oedema, tissue necrosis and eventually skin ulceration. However, the detailed physiological events by which inflammation contributes to wound formation are poorly understood. We therefore sought to develop a model that simulated the inflammation, using it to determine the internal stresses and pressure on the skin that contribute to venous ulcer formation. A three-layer finite-element skin model (epidermis, dermis and hypodermis) was developed to explore the roles in wound formation of two inflammation identifiers: glycosaminoglycans (GAG) and sodium. A series of parametric studies showed that increased GAG and sodium content led to oedema and increased tissue stresses of 1.5 MPa, which was within the reported range of skin tissue ultimate tensile stress (0.1–40 MPa). These results suggested that both the oedema and increased fluid pressure could reach a threshold for tissue damage and eventual ulcer formation. The models presented here provide insights to the pathological events associated with venous insufficiency, including inflammation, oedema and skin ulceration.
- Published
- 2019
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71. Neoadjuvant and adjuvant doxorubicin chemotherapy in a case of feline soft tissue sarcoma
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Filippo Torrigiani, Giorgio Romanelli, Paola Roccabianca, and Elisabetta Treggiari
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Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
Case summary A 7-year old male neutered domestic shorthair cat was presented with a 2 month history of a slow-growing mass on the right zygomatic area. A CT scan revealed a soft tissue mass in the right zygomatic region with no alterations of the underlying bone and features of local invasiveness. Cytology was suggestive of a mesenchymal tumour and histopathology from an incisional biopsy was consistent with a soft tissue sarcoma (STS). The cat was treated with neoadjuvant intravenous doxorubicin chemotherapy at a dose of 25 mg/m 2 , every two weeks. The patient experienced a partial response and underwent surgical excision of the tumour. Doxorubicin was continued as an adjuvant treatment for three further chemotherapy sessions, at a dose of 25 mg/m 2 every 21 days. Local tumour recurrence was detected on clinical examination and cytologically confirmed 259 days following surgery. Relevance and novel information Treatment with neoadjuvant doxorubicin can be considered in cases of inoperable STSs in order to cytoreduce the tumour and improve the chances of achieving complete surgical margins. The role of adjuvant chemotherapy in this setting remains unclear.
- Published
- 2019
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72. Performance of lymph node cytopathology in diagnosis and characterization of lymphoma in dogs
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Martini, V, Marano, G, Aresu, L, Bonfanti, U, Boracchi, P, Caniatti, M, Cian, F, Gambini, M, Marconato, L, Masserdotti, C, Nicoletti, A, Riondato, F, Roccabianca, P, Stefanello, D, Teske, E, Comazzi, S., Interne geneeskunde GD, dCSCA AVR, CS_Cancer, Martini V., Marano G., Aresu L., Bonfanti U., Boracchi P., Caniatti M., Cian F., Gambini M., Marconato L., Masserdotti C., Nicoletti A., Riondato F., Roccabianca P., Stefanello D., Teske E., and Comazzi S.
- Subjects
grade ,Lymphoma, B-Cell ,accuracy ,Lymphoma ,Animal ,phenotype ,Veterinary medicine ,Lymph Node ,Standard Article ,veterinary(all) ,Standard Articles ,Immunophenotyping ,Dogs ,Oncology ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,SF600-1100 ,morphology ,Dog ,Animals ,SMALL ANIMAL ,Dog Diseases ,Lymph Nodes ,Dog Disease - Abstract
Background: Cytopathology is a minimally invasive and convenient diagnostic procedure, often used as a substitute for histopathology to diagnose and characterize lymphoma in dogs. Objectives: Assess the diagnostic performance of cytopathology in diagnosing lymphoma and its histopathological subtypes in dogs. Animals: One-hundred and sixty-one lymph node samples from 139 dogs with enlarged peripheral lymph nodes. Methods: Based only on cytopathology, 6 examiners independently provided the following interpretations on each sample: (a) lymphoma vs nonlymphoma; (b) grade and phenotype; and (c) World Health Organization (WHO) histopathological subtype. Histopathology and immunohistochemistry (IHC) findings were used as reference standards to evaluate diagnostic performance of cytopathology. Clinical, clinicopathologic, and imaging data also were considered in the definitive diagnosis. Results: Classification accuracy for lymphoma consistently was >80% for all examiners, whereas it was >60% for low grade T-cell lymphomas, >30% for high grade B-cell lymphomas, >20% for high grade T-cell lymphomas, and
- Published
- 2021
73. Evaluation of cytological diagnostic accuracy for canine splenic neoplasms: An investigation in 78 cases using STARD guidelines.
- Author
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Marco Tecilla, Matteo Gambini, Annalisa Forlani, Mario Caniatti, Gabriele Ghisleni, and Paola Roccabianca
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Cytology represents a useful diagnostic tool in the preliminary clinical approach to canine splenic lesions, and may prevent unnecessary splenectomy. However, few studies have evaluated diagnostic accuracy of cytology in the diagnosis of canine splenic neoplasms. The aim of this study was to determine overall accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values (i.e. diagnostic accuracy indexes) of cytology for canine splenic neoplasms following Standards for the Reporting of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies (STARD) guidelines. A consecutive series of canine splenic cytological samples was retrospectively retrieved from the database of the Diagnostic Pathology Service of the Department of Veterinary Medicine (DIMEVET-University of Milan). Histopathology was set as the diagnostic reference standard. Cytological cases were enrolled when slides were available for review and when the same lesion was submitted for histopathology. Seventy-eight (78) lesions were included in the study. By histopathology, 56 were neoplastic and 22 were non-neoplastic. Cytology had an overall accuracy of 73.08% (95% C.I. 61.84%-82.50%), sensitivity of 64.29% (95% C.I. 50.36%-76.64%), specificity of 95.45% (95% C.I. 77.16%-99.88%), and positive and negative predictive values of 97.3% (95% C.I. 84.01%-99.60%) and 51.22% (95% C.I. 42.21%-60.15%), respectively. Low sensitivity and negative predictive value were balanced by very high specificity and positive predictive value. When positive for neoplasia, cytology represents a useful diagnostic tool to rule in splenic neoplasia, prompting surgery independently from other diagnostic tests. Conversely, a negative cytological result requires additional investigations to confirm the dog to be disease free.
- Published
- 2019
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74. Compound 48/80 increases bladder wall mechanical compliance via activation of MMP-2
- Author
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Pragya Saxena, Sara Roccabianca, and Nathan Tykocki
- Published
- 2023
75. Alteration in Mechanical Compliance via Mast Cell Activation in Juvenile and Adult Urinary Bladder
- Author
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Pragya Saxena, Sara Roccabianca, and Nathan Tykcoki
- Subjects
Physiology - Abstract
Balance between bladder wall stiffness and mechanical compliance is essential to maintain normal bladder function. These biomechanical properties are directly influenced by the integrity of the extracellular matrix (ECM) and its interaction with urinary bladder smooth muscle (UBSM). While it is clear that normal storage and voiding functions differ between juveniles and adults, it is unclear if these differences are due solely to increases in bladder size. Differences in the mechanical properties of the wall may also exist and are unexplored. Changes in mechanical compliance are implicated in the pathophysiology of many lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) such as overactivity and fibrosis due to inflammation. Interestingly, juvenile bladders are particularly susceptible to inflammatory LUTS by various factors (e.g., early life stress) compared to their adult counterparts. We were interested in how bladders from juvenile and adult mice respond to inflammation, specifically driven by mast cell degranulation. We hypothesized that: (1) juvenile bladders are inherently more compliant than adult bladders and (2) mast cell degranulation increases mechanical compliance in both juvenile and adult mouse bladders.Whole mouse bladders from juvenile (4–5 weeks old) and adult (12–14 weeks old) C57Bl/6 male mice were dissected and mounted in a custom designed pentaplanar reflected image macroscopy (PRIM) system for simultaneous measurement of transient pressure events, intravesical pressure, bladder volume, wall stress, and wall stretch during ex vivo bladder filling. Mechanical properties of the bladder wall were measured as the relationship between mechanical stress versus stretch. Properties of the transient contractions were calculated using acquired pressure-volume curves. Measurements were performed in the absence or presence of the mast cell activator Compound 48/80 (10 μg/mL).In the absence of Compound 48/80, the average stress-stretch curves had no significant shift for adult mice compared to young mice, implying no changes in mechanical compliance. However, the mechanical stress in adult mouse bladders was higher compared to juvenile bladders, implying that adult bladders were stiffer. In presence of Compound 48/80, both age groups show similar effects. Mechanical compliance increased with a paradoxical increase in amplitude of transient contractions. Together, these data suggest that while juvenile mouse bladders are less stiff, they respond to mast cell activation in a similar manner as adult bladders. Consequently, rapid degranulation of mast cells in juvenile bladders leads to increased mechanical compliance and contractility. Thus, preventing mast cell degranulation could represent a viable target for treating LUTS in children as well as adults. R01-DK119615 (NRT) and P20-DK127554 (SR and NRT) This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2023 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.
- Published
- 2023
76. Unveiling IL-33/ST2 Pathway Unbalance in Cardiac Remodeling Due to Obesity in Zucker Fatty Rats
- Author
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Sitzia, Clementina, primary, Vianello, Elena, additional, Dozio, Elena, additional, Kalousová, Marta, additional, Zima, Tomáš, additional, Brizzola, Stefano, additional, Roccabianca, Paola, additional, Tedeschi, Gabriella, additional, Lamont, John, additional, Tacchini, Lorenza, additional, and Corsi-Romanelli, Massimiliano Marco, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
77. Effects of Swelling and Anatomical Location on the Viscoelastic Behavior of the Porcine Urinary Bladder Wall
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Tuttle, Tyler, primary, McClintock, Dillon, additional, and Roccabianca, Sara, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
78. Diagnostic value of cytological analysis of tumours and tumour-like lesions of the oral cavity in dogs and cats: A prospective study on 114 cases
- Author
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Bonfanti, U., Bertazzolo, W., Gracis, M., Roccabianca, P., Romanelli, G., Palermo, G., and Zini, E.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
79. Nerve Fiber Immunohistochemical Panel Discriminates between Nerve Sheath and Perivascular Wall Tumors
- Author
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Sisó, Sílvia, primary, Marco-Salazar, Paola, additional, Roccabianca, Paola, additional, Avallone, Giancarlo, additional, Higgins, Robert J., additional, and Affolter, Verena K., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
80. Extravascular papillary endothelial hyperplasia mimicking soft tissue sarcoma in 2 cats: a potential diagnostic pitfall
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Francesco Godizzi, Mario Caniatti, Elisabetta Treggiari, Giorgio Romanelli, Ugo Bonfanti, Gabriele Ghisleni, and Paola Roccabianca
- Subjects
Diagnosis, Differential ,Hyperplasia ,General Veterinary ,Hemangiosarcoma ,Cats ,Animals ,Endothelial Cells ,Sarcoma ,Soft Tissue Neoplasms ,Brief Reports ,Cat Diseases - Abstract
Papillary endothelial hyperplasia (PEH) is a rare soft tissue lesion arising from excessive reactive endothelial cell proliferation described in humans, dogs, and horses. PEH is considered a diagnostic challenge in humans, in which it is frequently misdiagnosed as angiosarcoma. We describe here PEH that developed at injection sites in 2 cats that were initially misdiagnosed as feline injection-site sarcoma by cytology and as subcutaneous angiosarcoma by histopathology. Morphologic features included sharp demarcation from surrounding tissues, and a layered microscopic architecture with an outer fibrous capsule from which emerged fibrovascular stalks covered by a monolayer of factor VIII–related antigen and CD31-positive flat-to-plump endothelial cells. Both lesions had a cystic core containing abundant erythrocytes and fibrin. PEH lesions did not recur in either case. Immunohistochemistry for α–smooth muscle actin and desmin demonstrated that the capsule was devoid of smooth muscle cells, excluding an intravascular origin. PEH in these cats was hypothesized to have developed extravascularly following trauma related to injection. We wish to provide awareness of PEH in domestic cats and of the risk of misdiagnoses leading to overtreatment.
- Published
- 2023
81. Effects of Swelling and Anatomical Location on the Viscoelastic Behavior of the Porcine Urinary Bladder Wall
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Tyler Tuttle, Dillon McClintock, and Sara Roccabianca
- Subjects
Biomaterials ,Mechanics of Materials ,Biomedical Engineering - Published
- 2023
82. Kaplan-Meier Curves, Cox Model, and P-Values Are Not Enough for the Prognostic Evaluation of Tumor Markers: Statistical Suggestions for a More Comprehensive Approach
- Author
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Giuseppe Marano, Patrizia Boracchi, Giancarlo Avallone, Paola Roccabianca, Boracchi P., Roccabianca P., Avallone G., and Marano G.
- Subjects
discriminant ability ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prognosi ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,competing risk ,Competing risks ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,Dog ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Clinical endpoint ,cutoff ,Medicine ,Statistical analysis ,Dog Diseases ,prognostic factor ,Survival analysis ,General Veterinary ,Animal ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Cancer ,Statistical model ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,medicine.disease ,statistical analysi ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,oncology ,survival analysi ,tumor marker ,Proportional Hazards Model ,epidemiology ,pathology ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,Human - Abstract
The assessment of prognostic markers is key to the improvement of therapeutic strategies for cancer patients. Some promising markers may fail to be applied in clinical practice, or some useless markers may be applied, because of misleading results ensuing from inadequate planning of the study and/or from an oversimplified statistical analysis. This commentary illustrates and discusses the main issues involved in planning an effective clinical study and the subsequent statistical analysis for the prognostic evaluation of a cancer marker. Another aim is to extend the most applied statistical models (ie, those using Kaplan-Meier and Cox) to enable the choice of the best-suited methods for study endpoints. Specifically, for tumor-centered endpoints like tumor recurrence, the issue of competing risks is highlighted. For markers measured on a continuous numerical scale, a loss of relevant prognostic information may occur by setting arbitrary cutoffs; thus, the methods to analyze the original scale are explained. Furthermore, because the P-value is not a sufficient criterion to assess the usefulness of a marker in clinical practice, measures for evaluating the ability of the marker to discriminate between “good” and “bad” prognoses are illustrated. Several tumor markers are considered both in human and veterinary medicine. Given the similarity between markers for human breast cancer and canine mammary cancer, an application of the statistical methods discussed within the article to a public dataset from human breast cancer patients is shown.
- Published
- 2021
83. Review of Histological Grading Systems in Veterinary Medicine
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P. Valenti, Paola Monti, Erica Behling-Kelly, James K. Chambers, Paola Roccabianca, Giancarlo Avallone, Andrew D. Miller, Davide Berlato, Roberta Rasotto, Avallone G., Rasotto R., Chambers J.K., Miller A.D., Behling-Kelly E., Monti P., Berlato D., Valenti P., and Roccabianca P.
- Subjects
mast cell tumor ,tumor ,Veterinary medicine ,sarcoma ,Prognosi ,Veterinary pathology ,review ,cat ,Reproducibility of Result ,lymphoma ,carcinoma ,Renal cell carcinoma ,Carcinoma ,Tumor Grading ,Animals ,Medicine ,Grading (education) ,standardization ,Carcinoma, Transitional Cell ,General Veterinary ,Animal ,business.industry ,Soft tissue sarcoma ,Kidney Neoplasm ,Reproducibility of Results ,grading ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Kidney Neoplasms ,Urinary Bladder Neoplasms ,dog ,histopathology ,Osteosarcoma ,Sarcoma ,Neoplasm Grading ,business - Abstract
Tumor grading is a method to quantify the putative clinical aggressiveness of a neoplasm based on specific histological features. A good grading system should be simple, easy to use, reproducible, and accurately segregate tumors into those with low versus high risk. The aim of this review is to summarize the histological and, when available, cytological grading systems applied in veterinary pathology, providing information regarding their prognostic impact, reproducibility, usefulness, and shortcomings. Most of the grading schemes used in veterinary medicine are developed for common tumor entities. Grading systems exist for soft tissue sarcoma, osteosarcoma, multilobular tumor of bone, mast cell tumor, lymphoma, mammary carcinoma, pulmonary carcinoma, urothelial carcinoma, renal cell carcinoma, prostatic carcinoma, and central nervous system tumors. The prognostic relevance of many grading schemes has been demonstrated, but for some tumor types the usefulness of grading remains controversial. Furthermore, validation studies are available only for a minority of the grading systems. Contrasting data on the prognostic power of some grading systems, lack of detailed instructions in the materials and methods in some studies, and lack of data on reproducibility and validation studies are discussed for the relevant grading systems. Awareness of the limitations of grading is necessary for pathologists and oncologists to use these systems appropriately and to drive initiatives for their improvement.
- Published
- 2021
84. Paratuberculosis in Captive Scimitar-Horned Oryxes (Oryx dammah)
- Author
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Claudio Pigoli, Chiara Garbarino, Matteo Ricchi, Eleonora Bonacina, Lucia Gibelli, Valeria Grieco, Erika Scaltriti, Paola Roccabianca, Giuseppe Sironi, Simone Russo, Stefano Pongolini, and Norma Arrigoni
- Subjects
paratuberculosis ,pathology ,scimitar-horned oryx ,whole-genome analysis ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Paratuberculosis, a chronic disease caused by Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP), in ten scimitar-horned oryxes (SHOs) hosted in an Italian zoological park and originating from a Slovakian flock, was documented by pathology, molecular, cultural, and serological testing. The infection origin in this threatened species was also investigated by genomic analyses. Following the death of six of the 10 SHOs, serial investigations of dead and alive animals were performed. Necropsy, carried out on five out of six animals, identified intestinal thickening and mesenteric lymphadenomegaly in one of the animals. Histopathology (5/6) revealed lepromatous (2/5) and tuberculoid (2/5) intestinal forms or lack of lesions (1/5). Ziehl-Neelsen and immunohistochemistry stains identified two multibacillary, two paucibacillary forms, and one negative case. MAP was identified by quantitative PCR (qPCR) in tissue samples in five out of five SHOs and was microbiologically isolated from two of the three animals whose fresh tissue samples were available. Fecal samples were collected in four of the six dead animals: all four resulted positive to qPCR and in MAP was isolated in three. ELISA identified MAP-specific antibodies in three of the five dead animals whose serum was available. qPCR identified MAP in the freshly deposited feces of two out of the four alive animals. From the feces of these two animals, MAP was microbiologically isolated in one case. All isolates were classified as MAP type C and profiled as INMV2 and MVS27 by molecular analysis. Genomic analysis of a field isolate revealed clusterization with a European clade but was more similar to Italian than East European isolates. Our findings underline that paratuberculosis should always be considered in zoological parks in which endangered species are hosted. Infection can be subclinical, and multiple combined testing techniques may be necessary.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
85. Reporting guidelines for manuscripts on tumor prognosis
- Author
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F. Yvonne Schulman, Paola Roccabianca, Giancarlo Avallone, Christof A. Bertram, Mark Chalkley, James K. Chambers, Taryn A. Donovan, Robert A. Foster, Donald Meuten, Ilaria Porcellato, Simon L. Priestnall, Roberta Rasotto, Kazuyuki Uchida, Joshua D. Webster, Geoffrey A. Wood, Jeff L. Caswell, Schulman F.Y., Roccabianca P., Avallone G., Bertram C.A., Chalkley M., Chambers J.K., Donovan T.A., Foster R.A., Meuten D., Porcellato I., Priestnall S.L., Rasotto R., Uchida K., Webster J.D., Wood G.A., and Caswell J.L.
- Subjects
General Veterinary ,observational study design ,reporting guideline ,scientific publishing ,veterinary ,Prognosis ,neoplasia ,Research Design ,Neoplasms ,oncology ,Animals ,pathology ,prognostic marker ,surgical pathology - Published
- 2022
86. Quantifying Whole Bladder Biomechanics Using the Novel Pentaplanar Reflected Image Macroscopy System
- Author
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Grant Hennig, Pragya Saxena, Eli Broemer, Gerald M. Herrera, Sara Roccabianca, and Nathan R. Tykocki
- Abstract
Optimal bladder compliance is essential to urinary bladder storage and voiding functions. Calculated as the change in filling volume per change in pressure, bladder compliance is used clinically to characterize changes in bladder wall biomechanical properties that associate with lower urinary tract dysfunction. But because this method calculates compliance without regard to wall structure or wall volume, it gives little insight into the mechanical properties of the bladder wall during filling. Thus, we developed Pentaplanar Reflected Image Macroscopy (PRIM): a novel ex vivo imaging method to accurately calculate bladder wall stress and stretch in real time during bladder filling. The PRIM system simultaneously records intravesical pressure, infused volume, and an image of the bladder in 5 distinct visual planes. Wall thickness and volume were then measured and used to calculate stress and stretch during filling. As predicted, wall stress was nonlinear; only when intravesical pressure exceeded ~ 15 mmHg did bladder wall stress rapidly increase with respect to stretch. This method of calculating compliance as stress vs stretch also showed that the mechanical properties of the bladder wall remain similar in bladders of varying capacity. This study demonstrates how wall tension, stress and stretch can be measured, quantified, and used to accurately define bladder wall biomechanics in terms of actual material properties and not pressure/volume changes. This method is especially useful for determining how changes in bladder biomechanics are altered in pathologies where profound bladder wall remodeling occurs, such as diabetes and spinal cord injury.
- Published
- 2022
87. Primary intranasal perivascular wall tumors in 2 cats
- Author
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Godizzi, Francesco, primary, Avallone, Giancarlo, additional, Ghisleni, Gabriele, additional, Dell’Aere, Silvia, additional, Zamboni, Clarissa, additional, Valenti, Paola, additional, and Roccabianca, Paola, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
88. Le polynucléaire neutrophile dans les vascularites associées aux ANCA
- Author
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Witko-Sarsat, Véronique, Roccabianca, Arnaud, and Mouthon, Luc
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
89. Quantification of regional differences in aortic stiffness in the aging human
- Author
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Roccabianca, S., Figueroa, C.A., Tellides, G., and Humphrey, J.D.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
90. Overview of the Veterinary Cancer Guidelines and Protocols group's "Developing, reporting and validating histologic tumor grading systems".
- Author
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Schulman, F. Yvonne, Bertram, Christof A., Meuten, Donald J., Moore, Frances M., Avallone, Giancarlo, Bartel, Alexander, Bolfa, Pompei, Camus, Melinda, Chambers, James K., Dark, Michael J., Dervisis, Nick, Dobromylskyj, Melanie J., Donovan, Taryn A., Foster, Robert A., Krimer, Paula M., Miller, Andrew, Milovancev, Milan, Roccabianca, Paola, Selmic, Laura E., and Wood, Geoff A.
- Subjects
TUMOR grading - Abstract
The Veterinary Cancer Guidelines and Protocols (VCGP) group has developed guidelines for developing, reporting, and validating histologic tumor grading systems. These guidelines aim to standardize tumor evaluation in order to improve the care of animals with cancer. The grading systems should be reproducible, relevant to prognosis, and realistic in terms of applicability in a routine diagnostic setting. The VCGP group encourages collaboration from various disciplines and emphasizes the importance of standardized clinical outcomes and statistical assessment. The guidelines also suggest comparing histologic grade with other assays and encourage the publication of grading systems in peer-reviewed journals with sufficient details for replication and validation. Validation studies should be conducted before implementing the grading system on clinical cases. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
91. Canine smooth muscle tumors: A clinicopathological study
- Author
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Giancarlo Avallone, Valeria Pellegrino, Luisa Vera Muscatello, Paola Roccabianca, Gastone Castellani, Claudia Sala, Marco Tecilla, Paola Valenti, Giuseppe Sarli, Avallone G., Pellegrino V., Muscatello L.V., Roccabianca P., Castellani G., Sala C., Tecilla M., Valenti P., and Sarli G.
- Subjects
Leiomyosarcoma ,Male ,General Veterinary ,Leiomyoma ,desmin ,grading ,Muscle, Smooth ,hormone receptor ,Necrosis ,Dogs ,Ki-67 Antigen ,soft tissue sarcoma ,dog ,Animals ,Female ,Dog Diseases ,soft tissue ,prognosi ,Smooth Muscle Tumor - Abstract
Canine smooth muscle tumors (SMTs) commonly develop in the alimentary and female genital tracts and less frequently in soft tissue. The definition of histological criteria of malignancy is less detailed for SMTs in dogs than in humans. This study evaluated the clinicopathologic features of canine SMTs and compared the veterinary and human medical criteria of malignancy. A total of 105 canine SMTs were evaluated histologically and classified according to both veterinary and human criteria. The Ki67 labeling index was assessed in all SMTs. Estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR) expression was evaluated for soft tissue SMTs. Follow-up data were available in 25 cases. SMTs were diagnosed in the female genital tract (42%), alimentary tract (22%), and soft tissue (20%). Soft tissue SMTs frequently arose in the perigenital area, pelvic cavity, and retroperitoneum. A subset of soft tissue SMTs expressed ER and/or PR, resembling the gynecologic type of soft tissue SMT in humans. SMTs were less frequently malignant when assessed with human criteria than with veterinary criteria, better reflecting their benign behavior, especially in the genital tract where human criteria tolerate a higher mitotic count for leiomyoma. Decreased differentiation was correlated with increased proliferation, necrosis, and reduced desmin expression. Mitotic count, Ki67 labeling index, and necrosis were correlated with metastases and tumor-related death. Further prognostic studies are warranted to confirm the better performance of the human criteria when assessing SMT malignancy, especially genital cases, to confirm their usefulness in ER/PR-expressing soft tissue SMTs, and to better define the most useful prognostic parameters for canine SMTs.
- Published
- 2021
92. The usefulness of dermoscopy in canine pattern alopecia: a descriptive study
- Author
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Zanna, Giordana, primary, Roccabianca, Paola, additional, Zini, Eric, additional, Legnani, Sara, additional, Scarampella, Fabia, additional, Arrighi, Silvana, additional, and Tosti, Antonella, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
93. Effects of age-associated regional changes in aortic stiffness on human hemodynamics revealed by computational modeling.
- Author
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Federica Cuomo, Sara Roccabianca, Desmond Dillon-Murphy, Nan Xiao, Jay D Humphrey, and C Alberto Figueroa
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Although considered by many as the gold standard clinical measure of arterial stiffness, carotid-to-femoral pulse wave velocity (cf-PWV) averages material and geometric properties over a large portion of the central arterial tree. Given that such properties may evolve differentially as a function of region in cases of hypertension and aging, among other conditions, there is a need to evaluate the potential utility of cf-PWV as an early diagnostic of progressive vascular stiffening. In this paper, we introduce a data-driven fluid-solid-interaction computational model of the human aorta to simulate effects of aging-related changes in regional wall properties (e.g., biaxial material stiffness and wall thickness) and conduit geometry (e.g., vessel caliber, length, and tortuosity) on several metrics of arterial stiffness, including distensibility, augmented pulse pressure, and cyclic changes in stored elastic energy. Using the best available biomechanical data, our results for PWV compare well to findings reported for large population studies while rendering a higher resolution description of evolving local and global metrics of aortic stiffening. Our results reveal similar spatio-temporal trends between stiffness and its surrogate metrics, except PWV, thus indicating a complex dependency of the latter on geometry. Lastly, our analysis highlights the importance of the tethering exerted by external tissues, which was iteratively estimated until hemodynamic simulations recovered typical values of tissue properties, pulse pressure, and PWV for each age group.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
94. First report of fatal systemic Halicephalobus gingivalis infection in two Lipizzaner horses from Romania: clinical, pathological, and molecular characterization
- Author
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Taulescu, Marian A., Ionicã, Angela M., Diugan, Eva, Pavaloiu, Alexandra, Cora, Roxana, Amorim, Irina, Catoi, Cornel, and Roccabianca, Paola
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
95. Identification by real-time PCR with SYBR Green of Leishmania spp. and Serratia marcescens in canine ‘sterile’ cutaneous nodular lesions
- Author
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Cornegliani, Luisa, Corona, Antonio, Vercelli, Antonella, and Roccabianca, Paola
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
96. Cytology of Feline Nodal Lymphoma: Low Interobserver Agreement and Variable Accuracy in Immunophenotype Prediction
- Author
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Serena Bernardi, Paola Roccabianca, Matteo Gambini, Valeria Martini, Stefano Comazzi, Mario Caniatti, and Maria Elena Gelain
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lymphoma ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Cytodiagnosis ,Cat Diseases ,Immunophenotyping ,030308 mycology & parasitology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mediastinal Lymphoma ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Cytology ,medicine ,Animals ,feline nodal lymphoma ,Observer Variation ,0303 health sciences ,accuracy ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,Feline Lymphoma ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Gold standard (test) ,medicine.disease ,cytology ,Cats ,Histopathology ,interobserver agreement ,business ,NODAL - Abstract
Nodal lymphomas are less common in cats than in dogs and, consequently, no specific studies have been published. Cytology is the first step in the diagnosis of nodal lymphoma but is highly subjective. Morphological features have been introduced for the cytological classification of canine lymphomas but not for cats. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate interobserver agreement on various cytological features of feline nodal lymphomas and to investigate the accuracy in predicting B or T immunophenotypes. Four veterinary cytologists examined 25 feline nodal and mediastinal lymphoma cytological samples by adapting the criteria used for the evaluation of canine lymphomas and setting histopathology and immunohistochemistry as the gold standard. High interobserver variability was found in the evaluation of most features except for the presence or absence of cytoplasmic vacuoles, which were more common in B-cell lymphomas. Cytology training centre was the major factor influencing the extent of agreement among evaluators. Diagnostic accuracy in predicting lymphoma immunophenotype varied from 35% to 75% and did not appear to be correlated with the experience of the evaluators. We conclude that cytological criteria, commonly used to describe canine lymphomas, are not adaptable to the counterpart feline neoplasms. Cytology-based immunophenotyping of feline lymphomas from different laboratories, and different cytologists within the same laboratory, differ substantially and should not be considered reliable. Specific cytological criteria are needed to describe feline lymphoma.
- Published
- 2021
97. Identification of Histopathological Criteria for the Diagnosis of Canine Cutaneous Progressive Angiomatosis
- Author
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Abramo, Francesca, primary, Vascellari, Marta, additional, Colzi, Giada, additional, Pazzini, Luca, additional, Albanese, Francesco, additional, Olivieri, Lara, additional, Zanardello, Claudia, additional, Salvadori, Claudia, additional, Avallone, Giancarlo, additional, and Roccabianca, Paola, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
98. Aortic stiffness is lower when PVAT is included: a novel ex vivo mechanics study
- Author
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Tuttle, Tyler, primary, Darios, Emma, additional, Watts, Stephanie W., additional, and Roccabianca, Sara, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. The expression ratio of miR-17-5p and miR-155 correlates with grading in canine splenic lymphoma
- Author
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Albonico, Francesca, Mortarino, Michele, Avallone, Giancarlo, Gioia, Gloria, Comazzi, Stefano, and Roccabianca, Paola
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. Methods in isolation and characterization of bovine monocytes and macrophages
- Author
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G. De Matteis, Fabrizio Ceciliani, G. Ávila Morales, R. Furioso Ferreira, Cristina Lecchi, Francesco Grandoni, and Paola Roccabianca
- Subjects
Phagocytosis ,Cattle Diseases ,Cell Separation ,Biology ,Monocytes ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Flow cytometry ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Animals ,Macrophage ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Macrophages ,Monocyte ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Chemotaxis ,Mononuclear phagocyte system ,Flow Cytometry ,Phenotype ,Respiratory burst ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunology ,Cattle - Abstract
Monocytes and macrophages belong to the mononuclear phagocyte system and play important roles in both physiological and pathological processes. The cells belonging to the monocyte/macrophage system are structurally and functionally heterogeneous. Several subsets of monocytes have been previously identified in mammalian blood, generating different subpopulations of macrophages in tissues. Although their distribution and phenotype are similar to their human counterpart, bovine monocytes and macrophages feature differences in both functions and purification procedures. The specific roles that monocytes and macrophages fulfil in several important diseases of bovine species, including among the others tuberculosis and paratuberculosis, brucellosis or the disease related to peripartum, remain still partially elusive. The purpose of this review is to discuss the current knowledge of bovine monocytes and macrophages. We will describe methods for their purification and characterization of their major functions, including chemotaxis, phagocytosis and killing, oxidative burst, apoptosis and necrosis. An overview of the flow cytometry and morphological procedures, including cytology, histology and immunohistochemistry, that are currently utilized to describe monocyte and macrophage main populations and functions is presented as well.
- Published
- 2021
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