3 resultados para Economic losses
em Instituto Politécnico de Viseu
Resumo:
O herpesvírus está disseminado na população canina mundial, com uma seroprevalência de cerca de 40 a 80%. A infeção por herpesvírus canino causa elevadas taxas de mortalidade em cachorros e em cães adultos pode permanecer em estado latente ou ser reativado. A infeção por este vírus em canis de reprodução representa grandes perdas económicas, pelo que se pretende estudar a seroprevalência de herpesvírus em 52 cães pertencentes a dois canis de reprodução, para fins de venda de cães de raça. Foram analisados animais de ambos os sexos e com idades compreendidas entre 1 e 8 anos de idade. Devido a inexistências de terapia para cachorros com sintomatologia de infeção por HVC-1 pretende-se formular um protocolo de cuidados para ninhadas, suspeitas de serem portadoras deste vírus, e para os restantes cães da colónia. Estão descritos estudos que indicam o HVC-1 como um dos agentes indiretamente envolvidos na etiologia do linfoma canino, pelo que se procurou estudar a sua seroprevalência numa amostra de 28 cães com linfoma, sendo um dos objetivos a deteção de anticorpos HVC-1, nestes animais.
Resumo:
Background: The most frequent viral diseases which can cause abortion in sheep are Blue tongue, Border disease virus, Cache Valley fever and Schmallenberg virus. The diagnosis of abortion, namely virus-induced represents a challenge to field clinicians, since clinical signs presented by the dam are discrete, non-specific and variable (Agerhom et al., 2015). On the other hand, while some foetuses reveal characteristic and visible malformations, others do not reveal any lesions. In face of it, definitive diagnosis requires an appropriate history collection, as well as sending fresh samples, namely abortion material, foetus, placenta and umbilical cord, to a specialty laboratory, to obtain a precise diagnosis. Objectives: The authors suggest a registration method of all mandatory data, in order to further assist the diagnosis of viral diseases at the laboratories, including the most frequent congenital malformations reported in sheep abortions. Methods: Abortion samples of suspected viral origin were collected and all data were registered, in worktables optimized for this purpose. Results: The authors document, using macroscopic figures lesions of malformations in abortions, emphasizing the frequency and the importance of documenting each case, proposing practical and effective worktables to assist the fieldwork. Conclusions: Field clinician’s awareness of the importance of early detection of viral diseases causing abortion outbreaks stimulates a proper data collection for each case of abortion, in order to contribute to a precise diagnosis and posterior consistent epidemiological studies, which may allow diminishing of economic losses.
Resumo:
In the scope of the discussions about microgeneration (and microgrids), the avoided electrical losses are often pointed out as an important value to be credited to those entities. Therefore, methods to assess the impact of microgeneration on losses must be developed in order to support the definition of a suitable regulatory framework for the economic integration of microgeneration on distribution networks. This paper presents an analytical method to quantify the value of avoided losses that microgeneration may produce on LV networks. Intervals of expected avoided losses are used to account for the variation of avoided losses due to the number, size and location of microgenerators, as well as for the kind of load distribution on LV networks.