497 resultados para Canine Gastroenteritis


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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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The present study was undertaken to look for the effect of chloroethylclonidine (CEC) on prejunctional alpha-2 autoreceptors of the canine saphenous vein. The effect was tested on tritium overflow evoked by electrical stimulation from tissues preloaded with 0.2 μM 3H- norepinephrine. Yohimbine (3-300 nM) and CEC (1-125 μM) increased and UK- 14,304 reduced the overflow of tritium evoked by 300 pulses (1 Hz). The maximal increase of tritium overflow caused by yohimbine was much higher than that caused by CEC: 3.82 and 1.74 times, respectively. CEC (5 μM) abolished both the inhibition caused by UK-14,304 and the enhancement of tritium overflow caused by yohimbine. However, when CEC was added after yohimbine, it reduced the electrically evoked overflow of tritium, the maximal effect being a reduction of tritium overflow by 35%. Prazosin (1-100 nM) did not change either the inhibitory effect of UK-14,304 or the facilitatory effect of CEC. These results suggest that CEC acts on two different subtypes of prejunctional alpha-2 autoreceptors; on one of them it acts as an antagonist and increases the electrically evoked overflow of tritium (and inhibits both the effect of UK-14,304 and yohimbine); on the other it acts as an agonist and reduces the electrically evoked overflow of tritium. Alternatively, one can admit that CEC is able to inhibit alpha-2 autoreceptors, which causes an increase of the transmitter release, and to activate a nonadrenergic inhibitory receptor thus causing a reduction of the transmitter release.

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Canine brains infected with rabies virus were submitted to decomposition by being left at room temperature of 25 to 29 degrees C for up to 168 h. At 24 h intervals, brain fragments were analyzed by immunofluorescence (IF) and by the mouse intracerebral inoculation (MI) test to confirm the diagnosis of rabies and to measure the putrefaction effect on the accuracy of the diagnosis. Forty eight h after the beginning of the experiment, the MI test showed signs of impairment with four negative results, while after 72 h, 100% of the results were negative to the MI test and only one result was negative to the IF test, indicating that the threshold period for accurate diagnosis is 24 to 48 h before putrefaction. The authors recommend the shipment of suspected cases of rabies to the laboratory for confirmation, but the use of putrid materials for diagnosis is meaningless because of false-negative results.