2 resultados para Immunology and Infectious Disease

em Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora - Portugal


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O presente relatório refere-se às atividades desenvolvidas durante o estágio final do Mestrado Integrado em Medicina Veterinária da Universidade de Évora. O trabalho está dividido em duas componentes. A primeira consiste na descrição das atividades desenvolvidas na área da sanidade, profilaxia e clínica médica e cirúrgica de espécies pecuárias. A área da sanidade animal foi, em termos percentuais, aquela que registou uma maior atividade. A segunda componente visa uma revisão bibliográfica da língua azul ou febre catarral ovina, complementada pelo relato e discussão de dois surtos, um numa vacada e outro num rebanho de ovinos. A língua azul é uma doença epizoótica, infeciosa, de etiologia viral, transmitida por insetos do género Culicoides que afeta ruminantes domésticos e silvestres; Abstract: This report refers to the activities developed during the final stage of the Master‘s Degree in Veterinary Medicine of the University of Évora. The work is divided into two components. The first is the description of the activities in the area of sanity, prophylaxis and medicine and surgery in livestock species. The area of sanity was, percentually, the one with most accounted cases. The second component of this work aims to a literature review of bluetongue, complemented with the presentation and discussion of two outbreaks, one in a cattle herd and the other in a sheep herd. Bluetongue is a viral, epizootic and infectious disease transmitted by insects of the genus Culicoides which affects domestic and wild ruminants.

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Pine wilt disease (PWD) is one of the most damaging events affecting conifer forests (in particular Pinus spp.), in the Far East (Japan, China and Korea), North America (USA and Canada) and, more recently, in the European Union (Portugal). In Japan it became catastrophic, damaging native pine species (Pinus thunbergii and P. densiflora), and becoming the main forest problem, forcing some areas to be totally replaced by other tree species. The pine wilt nematode (PWN) Bursaphelenchus xylophilus, endemic, with minor damage, to North America, was introduced in Japan in the early XX century and then spread to Asia (China and Korea) in the 1980s. In 1999 it was detected for the first time in Portugal, where, due to timely detection and immediate government action, it was initially (1999-2008) contained to a small area 30 km SE of Lisbon. In 2008, the PWN spread again to central Portugal, the entire country now being classified as “affected area”. Being an A1 quarantine pest, the EU acted to avoid further PWN spreading and to eradicate it, by actions including financial support for surveyes and eradication, annual inspections and research programs. Experience from control actions in Japan included aerial spraying of insecticides to control the insect vector (the Cerambycid beetle Monochamus alternatus), injection of nematicides to the trunk of infected trees, slashing and burning of large areas out of control, beetle traps, biological control and tree breeding programs. These actions allowed some positive results, but also unsuccessful cases due to the PWN spread and virulence. Other Asian countries also followed similar strategies, but the nematode is still spreading in many regions. In Portugal, despite lower damage than Asia, PWD is still significant with high losses to the forestry industry. New ways of containing PWD include preventing movement of contaminated wood, cutting symptomatic trees and monitoring. Despite a national and EU legislative body, no successful strategy to control and eventually eradicate the nematode and the disease will prevail without sound scientific studies regarding the nematode and vector(s) bioecology and genetics, the ecology and ecophysiology of the pine tree species, P. pinaster and P. pinea , as well as the genomics and proteomics of pathogenicity (resistance/ susceptibility).