13 results on '"Begovoeva, Mattia"'
Search Results
2. Factors associated with foot-and-mouth disease seroprevalence in small ruminants and identification of hot-spot areas in northern Nigeria
- Author
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Begovoeva, Mattia, Ehizibolo, David O., Adedeji, Adeyinka J., Oguche, Moses O., Oyekan, Olumuyiwa, Ijoma, Sandra I., Atai, Rebecca B., Wungak, Yiltawe, Dogonyaro, Banenat B., Lazarus, David D., Samson, Mark, Ularamu, Hussaini, Muhammad, Maryam, Rosso, Fabrizio, Sumption, Keith J., Beard, Philippa M., Ludi, Anna B., Stevens, Kim B., and Limon, Georgina
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- 2023
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3. Identification of Mycoplasma Species in Cattle Associated with Bovine Respiratory Disease Mortality.
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Carella, Emanuele, Messana, Erika, Mugetti, Davide, Biasibetti, Elena, Pezzolato, Marzia, Peletto, Simone, Begovoeva, Mattia, and Rossi, Francesca
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PASTEURELLA multocida ,MYCOPLASMA ,UREAPLASMA ,RESPIRATORY diseases ,NASAL cavity ,MYCOPLASMA bovis - Abstract
Approximately 30 distinct Mycoplasma species have been isolated from cattle, but only a few are pathogenic and can cause serious respiratory diseases. Consequently, this study aimed to identify Mycoplasma spp. infections in cattle with bovine respiratory disease (BRD), considering factors such as animal demographics, concurrent infections with other pathogens, post-mortem clinical findings and histological examinations, and seasonality. A total of 326 samples were collected from 322 cattle that had died from BRD in Northwestern Italy. A total of 54 animals (16.8%) tested positive for Mycoplasma spp., and Mycoplasma bovis (n = 22, 40.7%) and Mycoplasma dispar (n = 13, 24.1%) were the most frequently detected species among the examined cattle. Among positive cattle, those aged five months or younger were approximately five times more likely to be infected by Mycoplasma dispar than by Mycoplasma bovis compared to those older than five months (proportional incidence ratio: 5.1, 95% CI 1.2–21.2). The main bacterial pathogens identified in cattle exhibiting co-infection was Pasteurella multocida, whereas the main viral pathogens were BRSV and BoHV-1. Histopathological investigations predominantly revealed catarrhal bronchopneumonia or purulent catarrhal bronchopneumonia among the examined cattle. Finally, Mycoplasma hyopharyngis, a species isolated from the pharyngeal and nasal cavities of pigs so far, was detected for the first time in the pneumonic lung of a bovine infected with BRD. Further investigations are necessary to thoroughly characterize its host range and pathogenic potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Interdisciplinary approach to solve unusual mortalities in the European common frog (Rana temporaria) in two high-mountain ponds affected by climate change
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0000-0002-0585-1168, 0000-0002-3261-4539, 0000-0002-7537-1274, 0000-0003-4763-6404, 0000-0002-5626-6495, 0000-0002-6783-4742, 0000-0001-6829-5229, 0000-0003-2452-1698, Pastorino, Paolo, Colussi, Silvia, Varello, Katia, Meletiadis, Arianna, Alberti, Silvia, Di Blasio, Alessia, Tedde, Giovanni, Begovoeva, Mattia, Peano, Andrea, Rossi, Luca, Renzi, Monia, Acutis, Pier Luigi, Barceló, Damià, Prearo, Marino, 0000-0002-0585-1168, 0000-0002-3261-4539, 0000-0002-7537-1274, 0000-0003-4763-6404, 0000-0002-5626-6495, 0000-0002-6783-4742, 0000-0001-6829-5229, 0000-0003-2452-1698, Pastorino, Paolo, Colussi, Silvia, Varello, Katia, Meletiadis, Arianna, Alberti, Silvia, Di Blasio, Alessia, Tedde, Giovanni, Begovoeva, Mattia, Peano, Andrea, Rossi, Luca, Renzi, Monia, Acutis, Pier Luigi, Barceló, Damià, and Prearo, Marino
- Abstract
The global decline in amphibian populations is a major environmental issue. Chytridiomycosis, Ranaviruses and the red-leg syndrome have been identified in unusual mortality events. However, these infections do not account for all causes of declining amphibian populations. Moreover, several cases of amphibian mortality are difficult to solve without resorting to an interdisciplinary approach. Two cases of unusual mortality in Rana temporaria occurred at two high-mountain ponds (northwest Italy) in April and May 2021. Water and frog samples were analysed to understand the possible causes responsible for the unusual mortalities. Results of the main physicochemical (pH, conductivity, dissolved oxygen, chemical and biochemical oxygen demand) and nutrient (ammonia/ammonium, nitrite, nitrate, total phosphorus) parameters revealed a good condition of the water quality, with the absence of the main cyanotoxins (microcystins/nodularins). However, unseasonably high spring water temperatures were recorded in both ponds (12.73 °C and 14.21 °C for Frog Pond and Selleries Pond, respectively). Frogs (n = 50; snout-vent length: 7.0-9.8 cm; body mass: 85-123 g) collected from Frog Pond mainly presented bumps on the ventral cavity and dermal ulceration associated with the isolation of Carnobacterium maltaromaticum. On the other hand, frogs (n = 5; snout-vent length: 8.0-9.1 cm; body mass: 87-92 g) from Selleries Pond presented petechiae and dermal ulcerations on the rear limbs associated with the isolation of Aeromonas salmonicida and A. sobria. In both mortality events, the interdisciplinary approach revealed an association between frog mortalities and the isolation of bacteria. Isolated bacteria are considered opportunistic pathogens, and the high values of the water temperature has certainly led a stress on the frogs, favouring the spread of bacteria and the death of the frogs. Further studies are needed to assess the pathophysiological effects of the opportunistic bacteria here is
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- 2023
5. Unintentional Recovery of Parasitic Diversity Following Restoration of Red Deer (Cervus elaphus) in North-Western Italy
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Moroni, Barbara, primary, Begovoeva, Mattia, additional, Rossi, Luca, additional, Angelone, Samer, additional, Robetto, Serena, additional, Visconti, Luca, additional, Regis, Anna, additional, Viganò, Roberto, additional, Preacco, Nicole, additional, Zoppi, Simona, additional, Rambozzi, Luisa, additional, and Meneguz, Pier Giuseppe, additional
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- 2022
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6. Endemic occurrence of Fasciola hepatica in an alpine ecosystem, Pyrenees, Northeastern Spain
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Roldán, Claudia, primary, Begovoeva, Mattia, additional, López‐Olvera, Jorge Ramón, additional, Velarde, Roser, additional, Cabezón, Óscar, additional, Molinar Min, Anna Rita, additional, Pizzato, Federica, additional, Pasquetti, Mario, additional, Fernández Aguilar, Xavier, additional, Mentaberre, Gregorio, additional, Serrano, Emmanuel, additional, Puig Ribas, Maria, additional, Espunyes, Johan, additional, Castillo‐Contreras, Raquel, additional, Estruch, Josep, additional, and Rossi, Luca, additional
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- 2020
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7. Peste des Petits Ruminants at the Wildlife–Livestock Interface in the Northern Albertine Rift and Nile Basin, East Africa
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Fernandez Aguilar, Xavier, primary, Mahapatra, Mana, additional, Begovoeva, Mattia, additional, Kalema-Zikusoka, Gladys, additional, Driciru, Margaret, additional, Ayebazibwe, Chrisostom, additional, Adwok, David Solomon, additional, Kock, Michael, additional, Lukusa, Jean-Paul Kabemba, additional, Muro, Jesus, additional, Marco, Ignasi, additional, Colom-Cadena, Andreu, additional, Espunyes, Johan, additional, Meunier, Natascha, additional, Cabezón, Oscar, additional, Caron, Alexandre, additional, Bataille, Arnaud, additional, Libeau, Genevieve, additional, Parekh, Krupali, additional, Parida, Satya, additional, and Kock, Richard, additional
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- 2020
- Full Text
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8. Peste des petits ruminants at the wildlife-livestock interface in the northern Albertine Rift and Nile Basin, East Africa
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Fernández Aguilar, Xavier, Mahapatra, Mana, Begovoeva, Mattia, Kalema-Zikusoka, G., Driciru, M., Ayebazibwe, C., Adwok, D.S., Kock, M., Lukusa, J.P.K., Muro, J., Marco Sánchez, Ignasi, Colom Cadena, Andreu, Espunyes, Johan, Meunier, N., Cabezón Ponsoda, Óscar, Caron, A., Bataille, A., Libeau, G., Parekh, K., Parida, S., Kock, R., Fernández Aguilar, Xavier, Mahapatra, Mana, Begovoeva, Mattia, Kalema-Zikusoka, G., Driciru, M., Ayebazibwe, C., Adwok, D.S., Kock, M., Lukusa, J.P.K., Muro, J., Marco Sánchez, Ignasi, Colom Cadena, Andreu, Espunyes, Johan, Meunier, N., Cabezón Ponsoda, Óscar, Caron, A., Bataille, A., Libeau, G., Parekh, K., Parida, S., and Kock, R.
- Abstract
In the recent past, peste des petits ruminants (PPR) emerged in East Africa causing outbreaks in small livestock across different countries, with evidences of spillover to wildlife. In order to understand better PPR at the wildlife-livestock interface, we investigated patterns of peste des petits ruminants virus (PPRV) exposure, disease outbreaks, and viral sequences in the northern Albertine Rift. PPRV antibodies indicated a widespread exposure in apparently healthy wildlife from South Sudan (2013) and Uganda (2015, 2017). African buffaloes and Uganda kobs <1-year-old from Queen Elizabeth National Park (2015) had antibodies against PPRV N-antigen and local serosurvey captured a subsequent spread of PPRV in livestock. Outbreaks with PPR-like syndrome in sheep and goats were recorded around the Greater Virunga Landscape in Kasese (2016), Kisoro and Kabale (2017) from western Uganda, and in North Kivu (2017) from eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). This landscape would not be considered typical for PPR persistence as it is a mixed forest-savannah ecosystem with mostly sedentary livestock. PPRV sequences from DRC (2017) were identical to strains from Burundi (2018) and confirmed a transboundary spread of PPRV. Our results indicate an epidemiological linkage between epizootic cycles in livestock and exposure in wildlife, denoting the importance of PPR surveillance on wild artiodactyls for both conservation and eradication programs.
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- 2020
9. Peste des Petits Ruminants at the wildlife-livestock interface in the western Albertine rift and nile basin, East Africa
- Author
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Fernandez Aguilar, Xavier, Mahapatra, Mana, Begovoeva, Mattia, Kalema-Zikusoka, Gladys, Driciru, Margaret, Ayebazibwe, Chrisostom, Adwok, David Solomon, Kock, Michael, Kabemba Lukusa, Jean-Paul, Muro, Jesus, Marco, Ignasi, Colom-Cadena, Andreu, Espunyes, Johan, Meunier, Nastacha, Cabezón, Oscar, Caron, Alexandre, Bataille, Arnaud, Libeau, Geneviève, Parekh, Krupali, Parida, Satya, Kock, Richard, Fernandez Aguilar, Xavier, Mahapatra, Mana, Begovoeva, Mattia, Kalema-Zikusoka, Gladys, Driciru, Margaret, Ayebazibwe, Chrisostom, Adwok, David Solomon, Kock, Michael, Kabemba Lukusa, Jean-Paul, Muro, Jesus, Marco, Ignasi, Colom-Cadena, Andreu, Espunyes, Johan, Meunier, Nastacha, Cabezón, Oscar, Caron, Alexandre, Bataille, Arnaud, Libeau, Geneviève, Parekh, Krupali, Parida, Satya, and Kock, Richard
- Abstract
In the recent past, peste des petits ruminants (PPR) emerged in East Africa causing outbreaks in small livestock across different countries, with evidences of spillover to wildlife. In order to understand better PPR at the wildlife–livestock interface, we investigated patterns of peste des petits ruminants virus (PPRV) exposure, disease outbreaks, and viral sequences in the northern Albertine Rift. PPRV antibodies indicated a widespread exposure in apparently healthy wildlife from South Sudan (2013) and Uganda (2015, 2017). African buffaloes and Uganda kobs <1-year-old from Queen Elizabeth National Park (2015) had antibodies against PPRV N-antigen and local serosurvey captured a subsequent spread of PPRV in livestock. Outbreaks with PPR-like syndrome in sheep and goats were recorded around the Greater Virunga Landscape in Kasese (2016), Kisoro and Kabale (2017) from western Uganda, and in North Kivu (2017) from eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). This landscape would not be considered typical for PPR persistence as it is a mixed forest–savannah ecosystem with mostly sedentary livestock. PPRV sequences from DRC (2017) were identical to strains from Burundi (2018) and confirmed a transboundary spread of PPRV. Our results indicate an epidemiological linkage between epizootic cycles in livestock and exposure in wildlife, denoting the importance of PPR surveillance on wild artiodactyls for both conservation and eradication programs.
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- 2020
10. FASCIOLOSIS EN EL REBECO PIRENAICO (RUPICAPRA PYRENAICA) EN UN ECOSISTEMA DE ALTA MONTAÑA
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Claudia, Roldan, Rossi, Luca, Óscar, Cabezón, Begovoeva, Mattia, Federica, Pizzato, Roser, Velarde, MOLINAR MIN, Anna Rita, Xavier, Fernández-Aguilar, Pasquetti, Mario, Gregorio, Mentaberre, Ribas, Maria P., Emmanuel, Serrano, Josep, Estruch, and JorgeClaudia Roldán Ramón López Olvera
- Published
- 2019
11. Endemic occurrence of Fasciola hepatica in an alpine ecosystem, Pyrenees, Northeastern Spain.
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Roldán, Claudia, Begovoeva, Mattia, López‐Olvera, Jorge Ramón, Velarde, Roser, Cabezón, Óscar, Molinar Min, Anna Rita, Pizzato, Federica, Pasquetti, Mario, Fernández Aguilar, Xavier, Mentaberre, Gregorio, Serrano, Emmanuel, Puig Ribas, Maria, Espunyes, Johan, Castillo‐Contreras, Raquel, Estruch, Josep, and Rossi, Luca
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FASCIOLA hepatica , *MOUFLON , *SHEEP , *CATTLE , *FRESHWATER snails , *PATHOLOGICAL physiology , *MOUNTAIN ecology - Abstract
Fasciola hepatica is a liver parasite of ruminants whose distribution is determined by its intermediate host, the freshwater snail Galba truncatula. In Europe, F. hepatica is mostly associated with lowlands. Infection from sympatric domestic reservoirs is rarely reported in wild mountain ungulates. This study explores F. hepatica in a multi‐host system in a European alpine area. Serum samples (n = 1,209) from Pyrenean chamois (Rupicapra p. pyrenaica), European mouflon (Ovis aries musimon), domestic sheep (Ovis aries) and domestic cattle (Bos taurus) were collected in the National Game Reserve of Freser‐Setcases (NGRFS) in Catalonia, Northeastern Spain, from 2008 to 2019, and tested for antibodies against F. hepatica. During the same period, the livers of 214 chamois hunted in the NGRFS were inspected for F. hepatica and associated pathological changes. Finally, 907 freshwater snails were collected in summer 2016 between 1559 and 2,224 metres above sea level (asl) in the NGRFS, and F. hepatica DNA sought by PCR. Antibodies against F. hepatica were detected in all four species, with a higher prevalence in cattle and sheep than in chamois. Fasciola hepatica and hepatic lesions were concurrently observed in 13/214 of the chamois livers inspected (6.1%, CI95 2.9%–9.3%). Fasciola hepatica DNA was detected in one out of the 907 snails (0.1%, Cl95 0.1% – 0.3%; Ct value 33.3) and collected at 2054 m asl. Fasciola hepatica was consistently detected in a high mountain multi‐host system, suggesting that its life cycle is completed and that it occurs endemically at the highest elevation reported in Europe. Transhumant livestock are the likely source in this alpine ecosystem, which according to rare occurrence of F. hepatica DNA in G. truncatula is still a suboptimal habitat for F. hepatica life cycle. Studying parasites at their highest distribution range can be useful to monitor climate change in seasonal mountain environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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12. Mycoplasma conjunctivae in insect vectors and anatomic locations related to transmission and persistence
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UCH. Departamento de Producción y Sanidad Animal, Salud Pública Veterinaria y Ciencia y Tecnología de los Alimentos, Producción Científica UCH 2019, Fernández Aguilar, Xavier, Cardells Peris, Jesús, López Olvera, Jorge Ramón, Puig Ribas, María, Begovoeva, Mattia, Velarde Nieto, Roser, Cabezón Ponsoda, Óscar, UCH. Departamento de Producción y Sanidad Animal, Salud Pública Veterinaria y Ciencia y Tecnología de los Alimentos, Producción Científica UCH 2019, Fernández Aguilar, Xavier, Cardells Peris, Jesús, López Olvera, Jorge Ramón, Puig Ribas, María, Begovoeva, Mattia, Velarde Nieto, Roser, and Cabezón Ponsoda, Óscar
- Abstract
Mycoplasma conjunctivae is an obligate microparasite that causes Infectious Keratoconjunctivitis (IKC) in Caprinae species. IKC is a long-recognised disease, but little attention has been paid to the mechanisms of transmission of the mycoplasma and its occurrence in locations other than the eyes. In this study, the presence of M. conjunctivae is assessed in the eyes, external ear canals (EEC), nasal cavity, and vagina of host species as well as in potential vectors, which may be involved in the transmission and persistence of infection within the host. M. conjunctivae was detected by qPCR in 7.2 % (CI 95% 4.7-11.0) of the ear swabs and 9.5 % (CI 95% 6.4-13.9) of the nasal swabs from Pyrenean chamois, Iberian ibex, domestic sheep and mouflon without statistical differences between species. Mycoplasma detection in nasal swabs was mostly associated with ocular infection (95.6%), but this was not the case for EEC (52.6%). Among the eye-positive ruminants, 27.3% were positive in ear swabs and 64.7% in nasal swabs, and the threshold cycle values of the qPCR were correlated only between eye and nasal swabs (p<0.01; r2=0.56). M. conjunctivae was detected in 1.7% - 7.1 % of Musca spp. captured during an IKC outbreak in Iberian ibex and in one out of three endemic sheep flocks. The results indicate that the transmission of M. conjunctivae may occur by direct contact with eye or nasal secretions and/or indirectly through flies. The M. conjunctivae DNA detection in EEC suggests that it can colonise the auditory tract, but the significance for its persistence within the host should be further assessed.
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- 2019
13. Mycoplasma conjunctivae in insect vectors and anatomic locations related to transmission and persistence
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Aguilar, Xavier Fernández, primary, López-Olvera, Jorge Ramón, additional, Ribas, Maria Puig, additional, Begovoeva, Mattia, additional, Velarde, Roser, additional, Cardells, Jesús, additional, and Cabezón, Oscar, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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