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Journal ArticleDOI

Pathologic and Immunocytochemical Studies of Morbillivirus Infection in Striped Dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba)

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TLDR
Histologically, a bronchiolo-interstitial pneumonia was the most frequent lesion and encephalitis due to Aspergillus fumigatus were seen in three dolphins, whereas two animals had lesions of toxoplasmosis.
Abstract
Hundreds of striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba) died along the Spanish Mediterranean coast during the second half of 1990. We necropsied 58 dolphins. Partial collapse ofthe lungs with patchy atelectasis, subcutaneous edema, icterus, and stomatitis were the most prominent gross morphologic changes. Histologically, a bronchiolo-interstitial pneumonia was the most frequent lesion (72% of the animals). It was characterized by hyperplasia of alveolar epithelial type II cells and formation ofmultinucleate syncytia in alveolar and bronchiolar lumina. Other prominent lesions were encephalitis (69%), lymphoid depletion, and formation of multinucleate syncytia in the cortex of lymph nodes. The distribution of morbillivirus antigen was investigated in 23 well­ preserved dolphins using a monoclonal antibody against the hemagglutinin glycoprotein of phocine distemper virus. Positive immunostaining was found in brain (77%), in lung (70%), and in mesenteric (61%), mediastinal (47%), and prescapular (45%) lymph nodes. Phocine distemper virus antigen was demonstrated less frequently in trachea, stomach, biliary epithelium, intestine, kidney, and mammary gland. Necrotizing-hemorrhagic pneu­ monia and encephalitis due to Aspergillus fumigatus were seen in three dolphins, whereas two animals had lesions of toxoplasmosis. Changes in our dolphins were similar to those caused by distemper in seals and porpoises. The origin ofthe dolphin virus and the relationships among dolphin, seal, and porpoise morbilliviruses are unknown.

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Biology and epidemiology of Toxoplasma gondii in man and animals

TL;DR: Toxoplasma gondii is a coccidian parasite which utilizes felids as definitive hosts, and which has an unusually wide intermediate host range, and is one of the most common parasitic infections of man and other warm-blooded animals.
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Marine Mammals as Sentinel Species for Oceans and Human Health

TL;DR: The long-term consequences of climate change and potential environmental degradation are likely to include aspects of disease emergence in marine plants and animals, and the concept of marine sentinel organisms provides one approach to evaluating aquatic ecosystem health.
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Climate Change Influences on Marine Infectious Diseases: Implications for Management and Society

TL;DR: Current knowledge about how the climate drives host-pathogen interactions and infectious disease outbreaks is reviewed and an adaptive management approach is recommended to better increase the resilience of ocean systems vulnerable to marine diseases in a changing climate.
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Abnormally high polychlorinated biphenyl levels in striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba) affected by the 1990–1992 Mediterranean epizootic

TL;DR: Although recent mobilization of lipid reserves was found to have occurred in some of the diseased dolphins, this had little effect on their PCB blubber concentrations and cannot explain the observed difference with the healthy individuals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decreased lymphocyte responses in free-ranging bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) are associated with increased concentrations of PCBs and DDT in peripheral blood

TL;DR: Data indicate that a reduced immune response in these bottlenose dolphins was correlated with increasing whole blood concentrations of several contaminants.
References
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Book

Pathology of Domestic Animals

TL;DR: The nervous system, the endocrine glands, the female genital system, and the male genital system are explained.
Book ChapterDOI

The Respiratory System

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