18 results on '"Casaro S"'
Search Results
2. Evaluating differences in milk production, reproductive performance, and survival associated with vaginal discharge characteristics and fever in postpartum dairy cows
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Figueiredo, C.C., Casaro, S., Cunha, F., Merenda, V.R., de Oliveira, E.B., Pinedo, P., Santos, J.E.P., Chebel, R.C., Schuenemann, G.M., Bicalho, R.C., Gilbert, R.O., Zas, S. Rodriguez, Seabury, C.M., Rosa, G., Thatcher, W.W., Bisinotto, R.S., and Galvão, K.N.
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- 2024
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3. Association between prepartum body condition score and prepartum and postpartum dry matter intake and energy balance in multiparous Holstein cows
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Casaro, S., Pérez-Báez, J., Bisinotto, R.S., Chebel, R.C., Prim, J.G., Gonzalez, T.D., Carvalho Gomes, G., Tao, S., Toledo, I.M., do Amaral, B.C., Bollati, J.M., Zenobi, M.G., Martinez, N., Dahl, G.E., Santos, J.E.P., and Galvão, K.N.
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- 2024
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4. Unraveling the immune and metabolic changes associated with metritis in dairy cows
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Casaro, S., Prim, J.G., Gonzalez, T.D., Bisinotto, R.S., Chebel, R.C., Marrero, M.G., Silva, A.C.M., Santos, J.E.P., Nelson, C.D., Laporta, J., Jeon, S.J., Bicalho, R.C., Driver, J.P., and Galvão, K.N.
- Published
- 2023
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5. Blood metabolomics and impacted cellular mechanisms during transition into lactation in dairy cows that develop metritis
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Casaro, S., Prim, J.G., Gonzalez, T.D., Figueiredo, C.C., Bisinotto, R.S., Chebel, R.C., Santos, J.E.P., Nelson, C.D., Jeon, S.J., Bicalho, R.C., Driver, J.P., and Galvão, K.N.
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- 2023
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6. Multi-omics integration and immune profiling identify possible causal networks leading to uterine microbiome dysbiosis in dairy cows that develop metritis.
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Casaro, S., Prim, J. G., Gonzalez, T. D., Cunha, F., Silva, A. C. M., Yu, H., Bisinotto, R. S., Chebel, R. C., Santos, J. E. P., Nelson, C. D., Jeon, S. J., Bicalho, R. C., Driver, J. P., and Galvão, Klibs N.
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MEDICAL sciences ,BAYESIAN analysis ,PARTURITION ,DAIRY cattle ,BACTERIAL growth - Abstract
Background: Cows that develop metritis experience dysbiosis of their uterine microbiome, where opportunistic pathogens overtake uterine commensals. An effective immune response is critical for maintaining uterine health. Nonetheless, periparturient cows experience immune dysregulation, which seems to be intensified by prepartum over-condition. Herein, Bayesian networks were applied to investigate the directional correlations between prepartum body weight (BW), BW loss, pre- and postpartum systemic immune profiling and plasma metabolome, and postpartum uterine metabolome and microbiome. Results: The Bayesian network analysis showed a positive directional correlation between prepartum BW, prepartum BW loss, and plasma fatty acids at parturition, suggesting that heavier cows were in lower energy balance than lighter cows. There was a positive directional correlation between prepartum BW, prepartum systemic leukocyte death, immune activation, systemic inflammation, and metabolomic changes associated with oxidative stress prepartum and at parturition. Immune activation and systemic inflammation were characterized by increased proportion of circulating polymorphonuclear cells (PMN) prepartum, B-cell activation at parturition, interleukin-8 prepartum and at parturition, and interleukin-1β at parturition. These immune changes together with plasma fatty acids at parturition had a positive directional correlation with PMN extravasation postpartum, which had a positive directional correlation with uterine metabolites associated with tissue damage. These results suggest that excessive PMN migration to the uterus leads to excessive endometrial damage. The aforementioned changes had a positive directional correlation with Fusobacterium, Porphyromonas, and Bacteroides in cows that developed metritis, suggesting that excessive tissue damage may disrupt physical barriers or increase substrate availability for bacterial growth. Conclusions: This work provides robust mechanistic hypotheses for how prepartum BW may impact peripartum immune and metabolic profiles, which may lead to uterine opportunistic pathogens overgrowth and metritis development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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7. Integrating uterine microbiome and metabolome to advance the understanding of the uterine environment in dairy cows with metritis
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Casaro, S., primary, Prim, J. G., additional, Gonzalez, T. D., additional, Cunha, F., additional, Bisinotto, R. S., additional, Chebel, R. C., additional, Santos, J. E. P., additional, Nelson, C. D., additional, Jeon, S. J., additional, Bicalho, R. C., additional, Driver, J. P., additional, and Galvão, Klibs N., additional
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- 2024
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8. Flow cytometry panels for immunophenotyping dairy cattle peripheral blood leukocytes
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Casaro, S., Marrero, M.G., Madrid, D.M.C., Prim, J.G., Nelson, C.D., Galvão, K.N., Laporta, J., and Driver, J.P.
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- 2022
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9. The economic impact of purulent vaginal discharge in dairy herds within a single lactation.
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Ojeda-Rojas OA, Pérez-Báez J, Casaro S, Chebel RC, Cunha F, De Vries A, Santos JEP, Lima FS, Pinedo P, Schuenemann GM, Bicalho RC, Gilbert RO, Rodriguez-Zas S, Seabury CM, Rosa G, Thatcher WW, and Galvão KN
- Abstract
The goal of this study was to calculate the cost of purulent vaginal discharge (PVD) in dairy cows. The data set included 11,051 cows from 16 dairy herds located in 4 regions of the US. Purulent vaginal discharge was characterized as a mucopurulent, purulent, or reddish-brownish vaginal discharge collected at 28 ± 7 d in milk. Gross profit was calculated as the difference between incomes and expenses, and the cost of PVD was calculated by subtracting the gross profit of cows with PVD from the gross profit of cows without PVD. Continuous outcomes such as milk production (kg/cow), milk sales ($/cow), cow sales ($/cow), feed costs ($/cow), reproductive management cost ($/cow), replacement costs ($/cow), and gross profit ($/cow) were analyzed using linear mixed-effects models. Pregnancy and culling by 305 DIM were analyzed by generalized linear mixed-effects models using logistic regression. Models included the fixed effects of PVD, metritis, parity, region, season of calving, and morbidity in the first 60 DIM, as well as the interactions between PVD and metritis, PVD and parity group, and PVD and morbidity. Farm and the interaction between PVD and farm were considered random effects in all the statistical models. A stochastic analysis was conducted using 10,000 iterations with varying relevant inputs. Cows with PVD produced less milk (9,753.2 ± 333.6 vs. 9,994.6 ± 330.9 kg/cow), were less likely to be pregnant (70.7 ± 1.7 vs. 78.9 ± 1.2%), and were more likely to be culled by 305 DIM (34.6 ± 1.7 vs. 27.2 ± 1.3%) compared with cows without PVD. Consequently, milk sales (4,744.7 ± 162.3 vs. 4,862.1 ± 161.0 $/cow) and residual cow value (1,079.6 ± 23.0 vs. 1,179.3 ± 20.3 $/cow) were lesser for cows with PVD. Replacement (639.4 ± 26.4 vs. 526.0 ± 23.4 $/cow) and reproductive management costs (76.3 ± 2.5 vs. 69.0 ± 2.4 $/cow) were greater for cows with PVD. The mean cost of PVD was $202. The stochastic analysis also showed a mean cost of $202, ranging from $152 to $265. The robust data set and the stochastic analysis strengthen both the external and internal validity of our findings, offering a deeper understanding of the economic consequences of PVD. In conclusion, PVD resulted in large economic losses to dairy herds by being associated with decreased milk yield, impaired reproduction, and greater culling., (© 2025, The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the American Dairy Science Association®. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).)
- Published
- 2024
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10. Pangenomic and biochemical analyses of Helcococcus ovis reveal widespread tetracycline resistance and a novel bacterial species, Helcococcus bovis .
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Cunha F, Zhai Y, Casaro S, Jones KL, Hernandez M, Bisinotto RS, Kariyawasam S, Brown MB, Phillips A, Jeong KC, and Galvão KN
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Helcococcus ovis ( H. ovis ) is an opportunistic bacterial pathogen of a wide range of animal hosts including domestic ruminants, swine, avians, and humans. In this study, we sequenced the genomes of 35 Helcococcus sp. clinical isolates from the uterus of dairy cows and explored their antimicrobial resistance and biochemical phenotypes in vitro . Phylogenetic and average nucleotide identity analyses classified four Helcococcus isolates within a cryptic clade representing an undescribed species, for which we propose the name Helcococcus bovis sp. nov. By establishing this new species clade, we also resolve the longstanding question of the classification of the Tongji strain responsible for a confirmed human conjunctival infection. This strain did not neatly fit into H. ovis and is instead a member of H. bovis . We applied whole genome comparative analyses to explore the pangenome, resistome, virulome, and taxonomic diversity of the remaining 31 H. ovis isolates. An overwhelming 97% of H. ovis strains (30 out of 31) harbor mobile tetracycline resistance genes and displayed significantly increased minimum inhibitory concentrations of tetracyclines in vitro . The high prevalence of mobile tetracycline resistance genes makes H. ovis a significant antimicrobial resistance gene reservoir in our food chain. Finally, the phylogenetic distribution of co-occurring high-virulence determinant genes of H. ovis across unlinked and distant loci highlights an instance of convergent gene loss in the species. In summary, this study showed that mobile genetic element-mediated tetracycline resistance is widespread in H. ovis , and that there is evidence of co-occurring virulence factors across clades suggesting convergent gene loss in the species. Finally, we introduced a novel Helcococcus species closely related to H. ovis , called H. bovis sp. nov., which has been reported to cause infection in humans., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The author(s) declared that they were an editorial board member of Frontiers, at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision., (Copyright © 2024 Cunha, Zhai, Casaro, Jones, Hernandez, Bisinotto, Kariyawasam, Brown, Phillips, Jeong and Galvão.)
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- 2024
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11. Application of behavior data to predictive exploratory models of metritis self-cure and treatment failure in dairy cows.
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Prim JG, Casaro S, Mirzaei A, Gonzalez TD, de Oliveira EB, Veronese A, Chebel RC, Santos JEP, Jeong KC, Lima FS, Menta PR, Machado VS, and Galvão KN
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- Animals, Cattle, Female, Lactation, Milk, Treatment Failure, Endometritis veterinary, Endometritis drug therapy, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Cattle Diseases drug therapy
- Abstract
The objective was to evaluate the performance of exploratory models containing routinely available on-farm data, behavior data, and the combination of both to predict metritis self-cure (SC) and treatment failure (TF). Holstein cows (n = 1,061) were fitted with a collar-mounted automated-health monitoring device (AHMD) from -21 ± 3 to 60 ± 3 d relative to calving to monitor rumination time and activity. Cows were examined for diagnosis of metritis at 4 ± 1, 7 ± 1, and 9 ± 1 d in milk (DIM). Cows diagnosed with metritis (n = 132), characterized by watery, fetid, reddish/brownish vaginal discharge (VD), were randomly allocated to 1 of 2 treatments: control (CON; n = 62), no treatment at the time of metritis diagnosis (d 0); or ceftiofur (CEF; n = 70), subcutaneous injection of 6.6 mg/kg of ceftiofur crystalline-free acid on d 0 and 3 relative to diagnosis. Cure was determined 12 d after diagnosis and was considered when VD became mucoid and not fetid. Cows in CON were used to determine SC, and cows in CEF were used to determine TF. Univariable analyses were performed using farm-collected data (parity, calving season, calving-related disorders, body condition score, rectal temperature, and DIM at metritis diagnosis) and behavior data (i.e., daily averages of rumination time, activity generated by AHMD, and derived variables) to assess their association with metritis SC or TF. Variables with P-values ≤0.20 were included in the multivariable logistic regression exploratory models. To predict SC, the area under the curve (AUC) for the exploratory model containing only data routinely available on-farm was 0.75. The final exploratory model to predict SC combining routinely available on-farm data and behavior data increased the AUC to 0.87, with sensitivity (Se) of 89% and specificity (Sp) of 77%. To predict TF, the AUC for the exploratory model containing only data routinely available on-farm was 0.90. The final exploratory model combining routinely available on-farm data and behavior data increased the AUC to 0.93, with Se of 93% and Sp of 87%. Cross-validation analysis revealed that generalizability of the exploratory models was poor, which indicates that the findings are applicable to the conditions of the present exploratory study. In summary, the addition of behavior data contributed to increasing the prediction of SC and TF. Developing and validating accurate prediction models for SC could lead to a reduction in antimicrobial use, whereas accurate prediction of cows that would have TF may allow for better management decisions., (The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the American Dairy Science Association®. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).)
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- 2024
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12. Optimization and Testing of a Commercial Viability PCR Protocol to Detect Escherichia coli in Whole Blood.
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Jones KL, Cunha F, Casaro S, and Galvão KN
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Bacteremia, specifically if progressed to sepsis, poses a time-sensitive threat to human and animal health. Escherichia coli is a main causative agent of sepsis in humans. The objective was to evaluate a propidium monoazide (PMA)-based viability PCR (vPCR) protocol to detect and quantify live E. coli from whole blood. We optimized the protocol by adding a eukaryotic-specific lysis step prior to PMA exposure, then used spiking experiments to determine the lower limit of detection (LOD) and linear range of quantification. We also compared the vPCR quantification method to standard colony count of spiked inoculum. Lastly, we calculated percent viability in spiked samples containing 50% live cells or 0% live cells. The LOD was 10
2 CFU/mL for samples containing live cells only and samples with mixed live and heat-killed cells. The linear range of quantification was 102 CFU/mL to 108 CFU/mL (R2 of 0.997) in samples containing only live cells and 103 CFU/mL to 108 CFU/mL (R2 of 0.998) in samples containing live plus heat-killed cells. A Bland-Altman analysis showed that vPCR quantification overestimates compared to standard plate count of the spiked inoculum, with an average bias of 1.85 Log10 CFU/mL across the linear range when only live cells were present in the sample and 1.98 Log10 CFU/mL when live plus heat-killed cells were present. Lastly, percent viability calculations showed an average 89.5% viable cells for samples containing 50% live cells and an average 19.3% for samples containing 0% live cells. In summary, this optimized protocol can detect and quantify viable E. coli in blood in the presence of heat-killed cells. Additionally, the data presented here provide the groundwork for further development of vPCR to detect and quantify live bacteria in blood in clinical settings.- Published
- 2024
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13. Establishing Galleria mellonella as an invertebrate model for the emerging multi-host pathogen Helcococcus ovis .
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Cunha F, Burne A, Casaro S, Brown MB, Bisinotto RS, and Galvao KN
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- Humans, Female, Animals, Cattle, Firmicutes, Bacteria, Uterus, Larva microbiology, Disease Models, Animal, Moths microbiology
- Abstract
Helcococcus ovis ( H. ovis ) can cause disease in a broad range of animal hosts, including humans, and has been described as an emerging bacterial pathogen in bovine metritis, mastitis, and endocarditis. In this study, we developed an infection model that showed H. ovis can proliferate in the hemolymph and induce dose-dependent mortality in the invertebrate model organism Galleria mellonella ( G. mellonella ). We applied the model and identified H. ovis isolates with attenuated virulence originating from the uterus of a healthy post-partum dairy cow (KG38) and hypervirulent isolates (KG37, KG106) originating from the uterus of cows with metritis. Medium virulence isolates were also isolated (KG36, KG104) from the uterus of cows with metritis. A major advantage of this model is that a clear differentiation in induced mortality between H. ovis isolates was detected in just 48 h, resulting in an effective infection model able to identify virulence differences between H. ovis isolates with a short turnaround time. Histopathology showed G. mellonella employs hemocyte-mediated immune responses to H. ovis infection, which are analogous to the innate immune response in cows. In summary, G. mellonella can be used as an invertebrate infection model for the emerging multi-host pathogen Helcococcus ovis.
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- 2023
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14. Sequencing and characterization of Helcococcus ovis: a comprehensive comparative genomic analysis of virulence.
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Cunha F, Casaro S, Jones KL, Bisinotto RS, Kariyawasam S, Brown MB, and Galvão KN
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- Animals, Clostridiales, Mammals, Phylogeny, Virulence genetics, ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters, Virulence Factors genetics
- Abstract
Background: Helcococcus ovis (H. ovis) is an emerging bacterial pathogen that commonly causes opportunistic respiratory, mammary, and uterine infections across mammalian hosts. This study applied long- and short-read whole genome sequencing technologies to identify virulence factors in five H. ovis isolates with low, medium, and high virulence phenotypes., Results: The resulting assemblies contained one circular chromosome ranging from 1,744,566 to 1,850,083 bp in length and had a mean GC content of 27.6%. Phylogenetic and nucleotide identity analyses found low virulence strain KG38 to be part of a clade that forms an outgroup apart from the rest of the H. ovis taxon. Assembling the first complete genomes of the species revealed major genomic rearrangements in KG38. One to six prophage regions were identified in each genome. A novel pathogenicity island was found exclusively in the two high virulence strains (KG37 and KG104), along with two hypothetical transmembrane proteins designated as putative VFs. Finally, three zinc ABC transporters and three Type-II/IV secretion systems were identified as possible virulence determinants in this species. The low virulence strain KG38 has fewer intact paralogs of these operons in its genome compared to the higher virulence isolates, which strongly suggests a role in virulence. This strain is also missing four putative virulence factors (VFs) found in other isolates associated with adherence (collagen adhesin precursor), immune evasion (choline-binding protein A and a PspA-like hypothetical protein) and cell wall synthesis (glycerol-3-phosphate cytidylyltransferase)., Conclusions: In this study, we assembled reference-quality complete genomes for five H. ovis strains to identify putative virulence factors. Phylogenetic analyses of H. ovis isolates revealed the presence of a clade representing a potentially novel species within the genus Helcococcus. A novel pathogenicity island and two hypothetical transmembrane proteins were found exclusively in high-virulence strains. The identification of Zinc ABC transporters and Type-II/IV secretion systems as possible virulence determinants, along with the differences in operon content between the low and high virulence isolates, strongly suggests they also play a role in the bacterium's pathogenicity. Taken together, these findings are a valuable first step toward deciphering the pathogenesis of H. ovis infections., (© 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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15. Targeted reproductive management for lactating Holstein cows: Reducing the reliance on exogenous reproductive hormones.
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Gonzalez TD, Factor L, Mirzaei A, Montevecchio AB, Casaro S, Merenda VR, Prim JG, Galvão KN, Bisinotto RS, and Chebel RC
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- Pregnancy, Female, Cattle, Animals, Dinoprost, Estrus Detection methods, Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone, Insemination, Artificial veterinary, Insemination, Artificial methods, Progesterone, Lactation, Estrus Synchronization methods
- Abstract
Adoption of automated monitoring devices (AMD) affords the opportunity to tailor reproductive management according to the cow's needs. We hypothesized that a targeted reproductive management (TRM) would reduce the use of reproductive hormones while increasing the percentage of cows pregnant 305 d in milk (DIM). Holstein cows from 2 herds (n = 1,930) were fitted with an AMD at 251.0 ± 0.4 d of gestation. Early-postpartum estrus characteristics (EPEC; intense estrus = heat index ≥70; 0 = minimum, 100 = maximum) of multiparous cows were evaluated at 40 (herd 1) or 41 (herd 2) DIM and EPEC of primiparous cows were evaluated at 54 (herd 1) or 55 (herd 2) DIM. Control cows received the first artificial insemination at fixed time (TAI; primiparous, herd 1 = 82 and herd 2 = 83 DIM; multiparous, herd 1 = 68 and herd 2 = 69 DIM) following the Double-Ovsynch (DOV) protocol. Cows enrolled in the TRM treatment were managed as follows: (1) cows with at least one intense estrus were inseminated upon AMD detected estrus for 42 d and, if not inseminated, were enrolled in the DOV protocol; and (2) cows without an intense estrus were enrolled in the DOV protocol at the same time as cows in the control treatment. Control cows were re-inseminated based on visual or patch aided detection of estrus, whereas TRM cows were re-inseminated as described for control cows with the aid of the AMD. Cows received a GnRH injection 27 ± 3 d after insemination and, if diagnosed as nonpregnant, completed the 5-d Cosynch protocol and received TAI 35 ± 3 d after insemination. Among cows in the TRM treatment, 55.8 and 42.9% of primiparous and multiparous cows, respectively, received the first insemination in spontaneous estrus. The interaction between treatment and parity affected pregnancy 67 d after the first AI (primiparous: control = 37.6%, TRM = 27.4%; multiparous: control = 41.0%, TRM = 44.7%). The TRM treatment increased re-insemination in estrus (control = 48.3%, TRM = 70.5%). Pregnancy 67 d after re-inseminations tended to be affected by the interaction between treatment and EPEC (no intense estrus: control = 25.3%, TRM = 32.0%; intense estrus: control = 32.9%, TRM = 32.2%). The interaction between treatment and EPEC affected pregnancy by 305 DIM (no intense estrus: control = 80.8%, TRM = 88.2%; intense estrus: control = 87.1%, TRM = 86.1%). Treatment did not affect the number of reproductive hormone treatments among cows that had not had an intense estrus (control = 10.5 ± 0.3, TRM = 9.1 ± 0.2 treatments/cow), but cows in the TRM treatment that had an intense estrus received fewer reproductive hormone treatments than cows in the control treatment (2.0 ± 0.1 vs. 9.6 ± 0.2 treatments/cow). Selecting multiparous cows for first AI in estrus based on EPEC reduced the use of reproductive hormones without impairing the likelihood of pregnancy to first AI. The use of AMD for re-insemination expedited the establishment of pregnancy among cows that did not display an intense estrus early postpartum., (© 2023, The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. and Fass Inc. on behalf of the American Dairy Science Association®. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).)
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- 2023
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16. Tracing the source and route of uterine colonization by exploring the genetic relationship of Escherichia coli isolated from the reproductive and gastrointestinal tract of dairy cows.
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Jones K, Cunha F, Jeon SJ, Pérez-Báez J, Casaro S, Fan P, Liu T, Lee S, Jeong KC, Yang Y, and Galvão KN
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- Animals, Cattle, Escherichia coli genetics, Female, Gastrointestinal Tract, Postpartum Period, Uterus microbiology, Cattle Diseases microbiology, Endometritis veterinary
- Abstract
The source and route of bacterial colonization of the uterus are still not established. The objective was to investigate the source and route of bacterial colonization of the uterus by exploring the genetic relationship among E. coli strains isolated from the gastrointestinal and the reproductive tract of dairy cows pre- and postpartum. Secondarily, uterine health status (metritis vs. healthy) was evaluated. Cows (n = 34) had the rectoanal junction (RAJ), vulva, and vagina swabbed every three days starting six days before expected calving until nine days postpartum. The uterus was swabbed postpartum. A blood sample was collected at all time points, but cultures were negative. Whole-genome sequencing was performed on 44 isolates recovered from eight cows (four metritic and four healthy) with growth on selective E. coli media from the RAJ, vulva and/or vagina and uterus. Clonal isolates were found in the RAJ or the vulva prepartum and in the vulva, vagina or uterus postpartum. Clonal isolates were also found in the RAJ, the vulva, the vagina and the uterus postpartum. Clonal isolates were found in individual cows and different cows. Absence of clustering based on virulence factor genes and all genes indicate no strain specificity to body site or uterine health status. These findings indicate that the gastrointestinal tract is the likely source of bacteria that colonize the reproductive tract via ascending colonization of the uterus through the lower genital tract. Additionally, cow to cow transmission occurs, and strains are not specific to body site or to health status., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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17. Measurement of the spatial shift of the pupil center.
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Camellin M, Gambino F, and Casaro S
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- Adolescent, Adult, Body Weights and Measures, Cornea surgery, Dark Adaptation, Diagnostic Techniques, Ophthalmological, Female, Humans, Hyperopia surgery, Keratomileusis, Laser In Situ, Light, Male, Middle Aged, Myopia surgery, Pupil radiation effects, Hyperopia physiopathology, Iris anatomy & histology, Myopia physiopathology, Pupil physiology
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the effectiveness of the pupil center as an anatomic landmark for excimer laser treatments., Setting: Sekal-Microchirurgia-Rovigo Centre, Rovigo, Italy., Methods: Pupillometry with the Costruzione Strumenti Oftalmici S.R.L. (CSO) pupil-measuring module (incorporated in Eye Top videokeratoscope) was performed in 52 patients with a diagnosis of myopia and in 25 patients with a diagnosis of hyperopia. Measurements both in mesopic and photopic conditions consisted of pupil diameters, spatial shift of the pupil center, and the distance between the pupil center and keratoscopic axis., Results: The mean pupil diameter in photopic conditions of illumination in myopic eyes was 3.52 mm +/- 0.56 (SD), while in mesopic conditions it was 5.37 +/- 0.78 mm; in hyperopic eyes the mean photopic pupil diameter was 3.01 +/- 0.46 mm, while the mean mesopic diameter was 5.12 +/- 0.48 mm. The mean spatial shift of the pupil center in myopic eyes was 0.086 mm (maximum 0.269 mm), while in the hyperopic eyes it was 0.095 mm (maximum 0.283 mm). The mean distance between the pupil center and keratoscopic axis in myopic eyes was 0.226 +/- 0.13 mm (maximum 0.75 mm), while in hyperopic eyes it was 0.45 +/- 0.19 mm (maximum 0.8 mm)., Conclusions: The mean of the measured pupil sizes was greater in myopic eyes than in hyperopic eyes. The spatial shift of the pupil center, as the pupil dilates, was relatively small in all groups; therefore, the pupil center is a good anatomic landmark for both traditional refractive surgery and wavefront-guided treatments. The mean distance between the keratoscopic axis and pupil center was greater in the hyperopic group than in the myopic group. Therefore, centration of any laser treatment on the basis of the keratoscopic analysis should be done carefully, especially in hyperopic eyes and in cases in which the pupil center is meaningfully shifted from keratoscopic axis, even in photopic conditions of illumination.
- Published
- 2005
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18. [Experimental morphological study, using electron microscopy, of adriamycin-induced cardiomyopathy].
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Accardo G, Aleotti A, Pazzi A, Tampieri ML, Zennaro A, and Casaro S
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- Animals, Cardiomyopathies chemically induced, Male, Microscopy, Electron, Myocardium ultrastructure, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Time Factors, Cardiomyopathies pathology, Doxorubicin pharmacology
- Published
- 1983
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