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Showing papers on "CATS published in 1991"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data indicate that feline immunodeficiency virus produces a slowly progressive deterioration of T-cell function but does not affect the ability of B cells to recognize and respond to a T-independent antigenic stimulus.
Abstract: Within 6 months of infection with the Petaluma isolate of feline immunodeficiency virus, specific-pathogen-free domestic cats exhibited a decrease in the percentage and number of circulating CD4+ lymphocytes and in the CD4+/CD8+ T-cell ratio, along with a marginally significant depression of pokeweed mitogen-induced lymphocyte proliferation in vitro. There was no loss of responsiveness to concanavalin A during this stage, and the cats were capable of mounting a satisfactory antibody response to a T-dependent, synthetic polypeptide immunogen. The pokeweed mitogen response deficit became clearly demonstrable by 11 to 12 months postinfection. A decline in the lymphocyte proliferative response to concanavalin A and a diminished ability to mount an in vivo antibody response to the T-dependent immunogen evolved by 25 to 44 months postinfection. Virus infection did not affect the ability of cats to mount an antibody response to a T-independent synthetic polypeptide immunogen. These data indicate that feline immunodeficiency virus produces a slowly progressive deterioration of T-cell function but does not affect the ability of B cells to recognize and respond to a T-independent antigenic stimulus.

215 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data demonstrate that 1) cardiac vagal efferent activity increases in response to acute myocardial ischemia--much more so among the animals destined to survive, 2) before CAO, susceptible and resistant animals can be identified by the vagal response to blood pressure increase and not by tonic vagal activity (assessed clinically by heart rate variability).
Abstract: Experimental and clinical evidence indicates that high risk for sudden death is significantly correlated with post-myocardial infarction depression in two "markers" of vagal activity, heart rate variability and baroreflex sensitivity. The present experiments were designed to answer some of the questions generated by those findings. In 33 anesthetized cats, the neural activity of single cardiac vagal efferent fibers was recorded in control conditions and after injection of phenylephrine (n = 33), before and during a 1-hour coronary artery occlusion (CAO) (n = 17), and before and after removal of the left stellate ganglion (n = 16). In the first minute after CAO, vagal activity increased by 35% from 1.66 +/- 0.37 to 2.57 +/- 0.62 impulses/sec (p less than 0.01); despite a slight decline, it remained for the entire CAO above the control values, to which it returned after CAO release. Of 17 cats, ventricular fibrillation occurred in nine (susceptible) and eight survived (resistant). Resistant and susceptible cats had different reflex vagal responses to CAO. Whereas the resistant cats had a 48% (p less than 0.01) increase by the second minute of CAO, susceptible cats had no change (-18%, p = NS) in vagal activity. These differences were independent of blood pressure changes. The increase in vagal efferent activity in response to the blood pressure rise induced by phenylephrine (baroreceptive reflex) was more marked in the resistant cats compared with the susceptible cats (+246 +/- 66% versus +80 +/- 14%, p less than 0.025). Just before the injection of phenylephrine, vagal activity was not different between resistant and susceptible cats (1.58 +/- 0.35 versus 1.48 +/- 0.30 impulses/sec, p = NS). In 16 cats, left stellectomy increased cardiac vagal efferent activity by 75% (p less than 0.01), and the reflex vagal activation secondary to phenylephrine was further enhanced (from 2.2 +/- 0.4 to 4.7 +/- 0.7 impulses/sec, p less than 0.001). These data demonstrate that 1) cardiac vagal efferent activity increases in response to acute myocardial ischemia--much more so among the animals destined to survive, 2) before CAO, susceptible and resistant animals can be identified by the vagal response to blood pressure increase (assessed clinically by baroreflex sensitivity) and not by tonic vagal activity (assessed clinically by heart rate variability), and 3) the findings with left stellectomy support the hypothesis that vagal activity decreases after myocardial infarction because of an increase, secondary to abnormal stretch of the cardiac mechanoreceptors, in cardiac sympathetic afferent traffic, which exerts a tonic restraint on vagal outflow.

194 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: In a prospective study, 141 cats with hematuria, dysuria, urethral obstruction, or combinations of these signs were evaluated by contemporary diagnostic methods and compared with 26 clinically normal cats (controls); detection of BHV-4 antibodies in approximately 30% of affected and control cats indicates prior virus exposure.
Abstract: In a prospective study, 141 cats with hematuria, dysuria, urethral obstruction, or combinations of these signs were evaluated by contemporary diagnostic methods and compared with 26 clinically normal cats (controls). Specific diagnosis was established in 45% (64/141) of cats affected with lower urinary tract disease (LUTD). Crystalline matrix plug-induced urethral obstruction was diagnosed in 21% (30/141) of affected cats, uroliths were identified in 21% (30/141) of affected cats, uroliths with concomitant bacterial urinary tract infection (UTI) were identified in less than 2% (2/141) of affected cats, and bacterial UTI alone was identified in less than 2% (2/141) of cats with LUTD. Viruses, mycoplasmas, and ureaplasmas were not isolated from urine samples collected from affected or control cats. Bovine herpesvirus 4 (BHV-4)-neutralizing antibodies were not detected in any serum sample obtained from cats with LUTD or from control cats. In contrast, BHV-4 antibodies were detected by an indirect immunofluorescent antibody (IFA) test in sera obtained from 31% (44/141) of cats with LUTD and 23% (6/26) of control cats. The prevalence of positive BHV-4 IFA test results in affected cats was not significantly different from that observed in control cats. Significant association was not apparent between positive BHV-4 IFA test results and clinical diagnosis, abnormal laboratory findings, or cat age. However, the number of male cats with BHV-4 IFA titer was significantly (P less than 0.02, chi 2 test) greater than that of female cats. Detection of BHV-4 antibodies in approximately 30% of affected and control cats indicates prior virus exposure. Further investigations are warranted to clarify the specific role of BHV-4 in cats with naturally acquired LUTD.

182 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: Evidence is provided supporting the hypothesis that FIV is the cause of an immune dysfunction in cats, with distinct similarities to that produced by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in people.
Abstract: Specific pathogen-free domestic cats with experimentally induced feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) infections of short duration (less than or equal to 10 months) exhibited depressed total leukocyte and neutrophil numbers and a marginally decreased lymphocyte proliferative response to pokeweed mitogen (PWM), while cats with infections of more lengthy duration (greater than or equal to 25 months) exhibited normal leukocyte and neutrophil numbers but a dramatic loss of responsiveness to both PWM and concanavalin A (Con A). Cats with short-term infections exhibited a decrease in the percentage of CD4+ lymphocytes in peripheral blood and a corresponding depression of the CD4+:CD8+ ratio. Cats with long-term infections exhibited a similar but more profound perturbation of the CD4+ lymphocyte subset that also included a decrease in the absolute number of CD4+ cells. The decreased responsiveness to Con A and PWM in cats infected long term paralleled the decline in CD4+ cell counts, and the duration of infection was directly correlated with the decrease in the percentage of CD4+ cells. These data provide evidence supporting the hypothesis that FIV is the cause of an immune dysfunction in cats, with distinct similarities to that produced by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in people.

168 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: It is concluded that large numbers of eosinophils may be retrieved from the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of healthy cats.
Abstract: Twenty-four healthy cats underwent bronchoscopy and bronchoalveolar lavage to determine the normal cytologic environment of the lower respiratory tract of cats. Initial screening to ensure the health of the study population included complete histories, physical examinations, thoracic radiography, CBC, serologic tests for feline leukemia virus, feline immunodeficiency virus, and occult heartworm, and sugar and Baermann fecal flotation. In 18 cats, protected catheter brush samples of airway secretions from the lavaged lung segment were taken for culture of aerobic and anaerobic bacteria and mycoplasma. Bronchial lavage fluid (5 sequential 10-ml aliquots of normal saline solution) was pooled and filtered with cotton gauze. The unspun sample was used for determination of a total nucleated cell count. Lavage fluid was cytocentrifuged and 500 cells/slide were scored for determination of the cellular differential. Activity of lactate dehydrogenase and concentrations of total protein and IgG within the supernatant were measured, and assays were performed to detect the presence of IgA and IgM. Complete histologic evaluation of the lavaged lung of each of 6 random-source cats was performed after differential cell counting revealed 18% eosinophils within bronchoalveolar lavage fluid recovered from this group. Alveolar macrophages were the predominant cells encountered; however, a quarter of all cells recovered were eosinophils. A significant relationship was not found between the abundance of eosinophils in the lavage fluid, and either isolation of aerobic bacteria, high total nucleated cell counts, total protein concentrations, or activity of lactate dehydrogenase. Histologic evaluation of the lungs of 5 of 6 random-source cats revealed normal lungs in 2 cats, and minimal abnormal change in 3 others. Evaluation of the lungs from 1 random source cat revealed acute, mild eosinophilic bronchiolitis. We conclude that large numbers of eosinophils may be retrieved from the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of healthy cats.

98 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: FIV-infected cats that were coinfected with either FCV, or with FCV and FeLV, had the highest prevalence of oral cavity infections and the most severe oral lesions.

97 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: Examination of lymphocyte changes in cats naturally infected with FeLV or FIV and explored the early stages in the immunopathogenesis of experimentally induced infection with these viruses found both groups of naturally infected cats had T-cell lymphopenia.
Abstract: Feline leukemia virus and feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) are lymphotropic retroviruses that cause a wide range of diseases in domestic cats. Although it is known that both viruses are capable of infecting T lymphocytes and that infected cats are lymphopenic, it was not known how infection with either virus might alter specific lymphocyte subpopulations. Using a panel of monoclonal antibodies to feline lymphocyte subpopulations, we examined, by use of flow cytometric analysis, lymphocyte changes in cats naturally infected with FeLV or FIV and explored the early stages in the immunopathogenesis of experimentally induced infection with these viruses. Both groups of naturally infected cats had T-cell lymphopenia. In the FIV-infected cats, the T-cell decrease was principally attributable to loss of CD4+ cells, whereas CD8+ and B-cell numbers remained normal. This led to inversion of the CD4+ to CD8+ ratio in these cats. In contrast, the T-cell lymphopenia in FeLV-infected cats resulted from decrease in CD4+ and CD8+ cells, which led to a CD4+ to CD8+ ratio within normal limits. Experimentally induced infection with these 2 viruses supported these findings. Infection with FIV induced early (10 weeks after infection), chronic inversion of the CD4+ to CD8+ ratio. In contrast, infection with FeLV did not alter CD4+ to CD8+ ratio in the first 20 weeks after infection.

97 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Spectral analysis of the augmenting PHR activities in different segments of the inspiratory (I) phase showed that the frequency of unit MFO and of nerve MFO rose during the course of I, and cycle-triggered histogram and interval analysis indicated that the frequencies ofunit MFO autospectral peaks were very close to the peak firing rates of the units during the portion of I analyzed.
Abstract: 1. Fast rhythms in discharges of individual phrenic (PHR) motoneurons were studied by spectral and interval analyses; and they were compared, using coherence analysis, with similar rhythms in whole-PHR nerve discharge. The purpose of this study was to ascertain the origin of the two rhythms, manifested as distinct spectral peaks, in PHR motoneuron and nerve discharge: medium-frequency oscillations (MFO, usual range 20-50 Hz); and high-frequency oscillations (HFO, usual range 50-100 Hz). 2. In paralyzed artificially ventilated cats, unit recordings were taken from 1) 26 isolated single PHR fibers (in 8 sodium pentobarbital-anesthetized cats) and 2) 27 identified PHR motoneuron somata in the spinal cord (in 5 decerebrate cats). Simultaneous whole-PHR activity was monophasically recorded from the contralateral PHR nerve for 1 and from both PHR nerves for 2. 3. The signals were subjected to time- and frequency-domain analyses. The latter included a novel application of coherence analysis to the study of population synchrony. 4. The autospectra of all PHR units showed prominent MFO peaks in the frequency range of the nerve MFO spectral peaks, as well as harmonic peaks, indicating the presence of this type of fast rhythm in the units' discharges. Spectral analysis of the augmenting PHR activities in different segments of the inspiratory (I) phase showed that the frequency of unit MFO and of nerve MFO rose during the course of I. Further, cycle-triggered histogram and interval analysis indicated that the frequencies of unit MFO autospectral peaks were very close to the peak firing rates of the units during the portion of I analyzed. Thus unit MFO spectral peaks reflected the rhythmic and augmenting discharges of the motoneurons, and similar nerve MFO peaks reflected the superposition of individual motoneuron discharges. 5. The coherences of motoneurons' MFOs to nerve MFOs were low or zero, indicating that only partial and weak MFO correlations occurred within the PHR motoneuron population. 6. In those cats (n = 11) that had clear PHR nerve HFO spectral peaks, about one-half of the recorded PHR motoneurons had HFO, as indicated by HFO peaks in the unit autospectra and/or the unit-nerve coherences. 7. For motoneurons having HFO, the coherence between unit and nerve HFOs was substantial, particularly when the latter were strong, indicating HFO correlations among a number of PHR motoneurons. 8. In the light of theoretical considerations on the generation of aggregate rhythms from superposition of unitary rhythms, these observations indicate the following.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

95 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Relatively uniform Mb saturation below venous PO2 should accelerate release of O2 from capillaries, promote Mb-facilitated O2 diffusion, and minimize diffusive O2 shunting.
Abstract: Myoglobin (Mb) saturation in individual subepicardial myocytes was determined by cryospectroscopy in dogs, cats, ferrets, rabbits, and rats. Mb saturation within 800 microns of the epicardium is no...

86 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: Mismatched transfusions in blood-type-B cats caused marked transient reactions including systemic anaphylactic signs and hemolytic signs associated with severe reduction in plasma alloantibody titer and complement activity.
Abstract: Although nearly all domestic shorthair and longhair cats have type-A blood (greater than 99%), the frequency of blood type B in various feline breeds ranges from 0 to 59%. All blood-type-B cats have strong natural alloantibodies, predominantly of the IgM class, whereas blood-type-A cats have low alloantibody titers of the IgG and IgM classes. We therefore studied the efficacy and safety of transfusing 20 ml of matched and mismatched 14C-potassium cyanate-labeled blood to cats. In autologous and allogeneic matched transfusions of blood-type-A and type-B cats, the half-life of labeled erythrocytes proved to be similar (29 to 39 days). In contrast, type-B erythrocytes transfused into 5 blood-type-A cats had a mean (+/- SD) half-life of only 2.1 +/- 0.2 days and induced minor transfusion reactions. Half of the type-A blood given to 4 blood-type-B cats was destroyed within minutes to 6 hours (mean +/- SD = 1.3 +/- 2.3 hours), depending on the alloantibody titer. After 1 day, none of the labeled erythrocytes were detected. Mismatched transfusions in blood-type-B cats caused marked transient reactions including systemic anaphylactic signs (hypotension, bradycardia, apnea, urination, defecation, vomiting, and severe neurologic depression) and hemolytic signs (hemoglobinemia and pigmenturia) associated with severe reduction in plasma alloantibody titer and complement activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

83 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Donald C. Bolser1
TL;DR: It is concluded that fictive cough can be produced in paralyzed cats ventilated on a phrenic-triggered pump and can beproduced in the absence of afferent feedback associated with active expiration.
Abstract: Experiments were performed to determine whether cough could be elicited in paralyzed cats ventilated on a respiratory cycle-triggered pump. Midcollicular decerebrate cats were paralyzed and artific...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: M-mode echocardiography was completed and plasma taurine concentrations were determined in 79 healthy cats and 77 cats with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), finding that end-systolic and end-diastolic cardiac chamber dimensions were larger; wall thickness measures were smaller; and calculations of fractional shortening were less in cats with DCM than in healthy cats.
Abstract: M-mode echocardiography was completed and plasma taurine concentrations were determined in 79 healthy cats and 77 cats with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). In healthy cats, a relationship was not observed between plasma taurine concentrations and any M-mode echocardiographic measurement. End-systolic and end-diastolic cardiac chamber dimensions were larger; wall thickness measures were smaller; and calculations of fractional shortening were less in cats with DCM than in healthy cats. Plasma taurine concentrations less than 30 nmol/mL were detected in 7/79 healthy cats and in 52/77 cats with DCM. Of the 52 cats with DCM and an initial plasma taurine concentration less than 30 nmol/mL, 23 died or were euthanized during the first post-treatment week, 7 were lost to further study, and 22 improved after taurine supplementation. Of the 25 cats with DCM and an initial plasma taurine concentration greater than or equal to 30 nmol/mL, 9 died or were euthanatized during the first post-treatment week, and 9 were lost to further study. Two cats did not improve, of which one died and one was euthanatized 4 to 8 weeks after initiation of taurine supplementation. Five cats with a plasma taurine concentration greater than or equal to 30 nmol/mL improved after taurine supplementation. Myocardial function subsequently deteriorated in three of these cats. Two of the three cats had signs of congestive heart failure redevelop.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Serum virus neutralising and serum and salivary class specific immunoglobulin responses were investigated and no relationship between cessation of virus shedding in an individual animal and systemic and local antibody responses was seen.

Journal Article
TL;DR: Between 1988 and 1991, feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) infection status was evaluated in 1,160 cats examined at an oncology referral and general practice in Los Angeles, California and three neoplastic processes were observed; myeloproliferative disease, lymphoma, and squamous cell carcinoma.
Abstract: Between 1988 and 1991, feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) infection status was evaluated in 1,160 cats examined at an oncology referral and general practice in Los Angeles, California. Twenty-nine (2.5%) cats were FIV positive. Neoplasia was present in 18 of the 29 (62%) cats. Sampling for neoplasia was intentionally biased in the oncology referral group. However, 33% (6/18) of FIV-infected cats with neoplasia originated from the general practice. Three neoplastic processes were observed; myeloproliferative disease (MPD; 5/18), lymphoma (LSA; 5/18), and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC; 7/18). One cat had LSA and SCC. Extranodal sites of LSA were common (66%) in FIV-infected cats. Sites of LSA were submandibular and mesenteric lymph nodes, liver, kidneys, periorbital area, and diffuse (heart, pancreas, bladder). Sites of SCC were sublingual (n = 2), nasal planum (n = 3), nasal planum and eyelids (n = 1), and mandible (n = 2). Feline leukemia virus co-infection was observed in 17% (5/29) of FIV-infected cats. The FIV-infected cats with MPD were young (range, 8 months to 13 years; median, 4 years) and had short survival duration (2, 6, 21, 134, 249 days) even in response to aggressive treatment. The FIV-infected cats with LSA were older (median age, 8 years; range, 4 to 14 years) and survived 60 days if untreated. Cats administered chemotherapy survived 39, 45, 217, and 243 days; the latter 2 cats had partial remission of 2 months' duration. Older FIV-infected cats had SCC (median age, 12 years; remission range, 7 to 16 years) because of more frequent association of both diseases in older cats with outdoor environment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Journal Article
TL;DR: The medical records of 7 hypercalcemic cats with primary hyperparathyroidism were evaluated, and none of the cats had clinical problems with hypocalcemia after surgery, although 2 cats developed hypocalCEmia without tetany, one of which was controlled with oral administration of dihydrotachysterol and the other with Oral administration of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D.
Abstract: The medical records of 7 hypercalcemic cats with primary hyperparathyroidism were evaluated. Mean age was 12.9 years, with ages ranging from 8 to 15 years; 5 were female; 5 were Siamese, and 2 were of mixed breed. The most common clinical signs detected by owners were anorexia and lethargy. A cervical mass was palpable in 4 cats. Serum calcium concentrations were 11.1 to 22.8 mg/dl, with a mean of 15.8 mg/dl calculated from each cat's highest preoperative value. The serum phosphorus concentration was low in 2 cats, within reference limits in 4, and slightly high in 1 cat. The BUN concentration was greater than 60 mg/dl in 2 cats, 31 to 35 mg/dl in 2 cats, and less than 30 mg/dl in 3 cats. Abnormalities were detected in serum alanine transaminase, aspartate transaminase, and alkaline phosphatase activities from 2 or 3 cats. Parathormone (PTH) concentrations were measured in 2 cats before and after surgery. The preoperative PTH concentration was within reference limits in 1 cat and was high in 1 cat. The PTH concentrations were lower after surgery in both cats tested. A solitary parathyroid adenoma was surgically removed from 5 cats, bilateral parathyroid cystadenomas were surgically resected in 1 cat, and a parathyroid carcinoma was diagnosed at necropsy in 1 cat. None of the cats had clinical problems with hypocalcemia after surgery, although 2 cats developed hypocalcemia without tetany, one of which was controlled with oral administration of dihydrotachysterol and the other with oral administration of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D. All 5 of the cta that underwent removal of an adenoma were alive at least 240 days after surgery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Journal Article
TL;DR: The most common morphologic feature was a lymphocytic-plasmacytic anterior uveal infiltrate that was either diffuse or nodular; specific cause could not be associated with this nongranulomatous anterior Uveitis.
Abstract: Histopathologic findings in 158 globes obtained from 139 cats by enucleation or at necropsy, with histopathologic diagnosis of uveitis, were compared, and morphology was correlated with clinical and/or histopathologic diagnosis The most common morphologic feature was a lymphocytic-plasmacytic anterior uveal infiltrate that was either diffuse or nodular; specific cause could not be associated with this nongranulomatous anterior uveitis In decreasing order of frequency, other common causes of uveitis in cats included feline infectious peritonitis; FeLV-associated lymphosarcoma; trauma; and lens-induced uveitis

Journal Article
TL;DR: Case records of 37 cats with chylothorax examined at 2 institutions were retrospectively evaluated and there was no significant difference in the survival rate of cats that underwent thoracic duct ligation and those that were treated by other means.
Abstract: Case records of 37 cats with chylothorax examined at 2 institutions were retrospectively evaluated. Dyspnea and coughing were the most common abnormalities noticed by the owners, and most cats were dyspneic on initial examination. There was no statistically significant difference in the gender distribution of cats studied when compared with reference populations; however, purebred cats appeared to be overrepresented in the study population. Four of the cats had unilateral pleural effusion (2 left side, 2 right side) and 9 cats had effusions that were primarily, but not exclusively, on the right side. Surgery was performed on 20 cats. Fifteen cats underwent thoracic duct or cisterna chyli ligation; 20% had complete resolution of pleural fluid. There was no significant difference in the survival rate of cats that underwent thoracic duct ligation and those that were treated by other means. Six cats had mesenteric lymphangiography performed; 2 cats had normal results, and the remainder had various degrees of thoracic lymphangiectasia. Two cats in which pleuroperitoneal shunts were placed and 2 of 3 cats that underwent pleurodesis were euthanatized or died after surgery.

Journal Article
TL;DR: It is concluded that the prevalence of EH in cats increases with age in sexually intact female cats, and that most cases of pyometra or endometritis, but not EH, in cats are associated with retained CL.
Abstract: Records of 79 cats determined to have endometrial hyperplasia (EH) with or without pyometra or endometritis were studied. Forty-eight cats (61%) were spayed or died because of complications relating to reproductive tract disease. All other cats were free of clinical signs of disease, and lesions were found incidentally during routine ovariohysterectomy or at necropsy. Prevalence of uterine lesions was greater in cats greater than or equal to 5 years old. Breeding, age at first breeding, and queening could not be correlated with clinical or pathologic signs of disease. Seventy-one percent (34/48) of cats with clinical signs referable to the reproductive tract had histologic evidence of pyometra or endometritis, whereas only 19% (6/31) of cats without clinical signs had histologic evidence of either disease. Only 23% (9/39) of cats without pyometra or endometritis had corpora lutea (CL) in at least one ovary, whereas 40% (16/40) of cats with either pyometra or endometritis had CL. We concluded that the prevalence of EH in cats increases with age in sexually intact female cats, and that most cases of pyometra or endometritis, but not EH, in cats are associated with retained CL.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Diltiazem provides an effective and apparently safe treatment for the management of feline hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and is associated with a significant reduction of pulmonary congestion assessed radiographically and improved peripheral perfusion.
Abstract: To determine the efficacy of and clinical response to several pharmacologic agents for treatment of idiopathic hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in cats, 17 symptomatic cats were randomized to treatment with either propranolol, diltiazem, or verapamil. Clinical, laboratory, radiographic, electrocardiographic, and echocardiographic data were obtained before treatment and after 3 and 6 months of chronic oral therapy. Too few of the cats receiving propranolol or verapamil survived long enough to obtain long-term data needed to make statistical comparisons between groups. However, all 12 cats ultimately treated with diltiazem became asymptomatic, and no adverse effects from this drug were noted in any of these cats. Treatment with diltiazem was associated with a significant reduction of pulmonary congestion assessed radiographically (P less than 0.01), and improved ventricular filling based on echocardiographic measurements of left atrial size (P less than 0.05), left ventricular internal diastolic dimension (P less than 0.05), and relaxation time index (P less than 0.001). There was also a drug-related improvement in jugular venous oxygen tension (P less than 0.001) and blood lactate concentration (P less than 0.01) suggesting improved peripheral perfusion in the cats receiving diltiazem. The results indicate that diltiazem provides an effective and apparently safe treatment for the management of feline hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.

Journal Article
R. Lehmann1, Marco Franchini1, A Aubert1, C. Wolfensberger1, J Cronier1, Hans Lutz1 
TL;DR: In the early phase of FIV infection, the immune system is not depressed appreciably, and therefore, cats may be successfully immunized; a recombinant FeLV vaccine was efficacious in protecting cats against intraperitoneal challenge exposure with FeLV.
Abstract: A group of 15 cats experimentally infected with a Swiss isolate of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) and a group of 15 FIV-negative control cats were inoculated with an FeLV vaccine containing recombinant FeLV-envelope. High ELISA antibody titer developed after vaccination in FIV-positive and FIV-negative cats. Vaccinated and nonvaccinated controls were later challenge exposed by intraperitoneal administration of virulent FeLV subtype A (Glasgow). Although 12 of 12 nonvaccinated controls became infected with FeLV (10 persistently, 2 transiently), only 1 of 18 vaccinated (9 FIV positive, 9 FIV negative) cats had persistent and 2 of 18 had transient viremia. From these data and other observations, 2 conclusions were drawn: In the early phase of FIV infection, the immune system is not depressed appreciably, and therefore, cats may be successfully immunized; a recombinant FeLV vaccine was efficacious in protecting cats against intraperitoneal challenge exposure with FeLV.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that M. felis plays a role in feline conjunctivitis and inoculation of two isolates into the conjunctival sacs of healthy cats induced conjunctiva hyperemia.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Retrogradely labeled neurons were found predominantly in the deep dorsal horn, the intermediate zone/ventral horn and in the area surrounding the central canal, while the first and second sacral segments contained the largest numbers of retrogradely labeling neurons in the spinal cord.
Abstract: Various cutaneous and visceral stimuli alter the discharge rates of neurons in the hypothalamus Changes in the activity of hypothalamic neurons are thought to play important roles in eliciting neuroendocrine, autonomic, and affective responses to somatosensory and visceral stimuli Information from peripheral structures has been considered generally to reach the hypothalamus via multisynaptic ascending pathways Recently, a direct projection from the spinal cord to the hypothalamus was demonstrated in rats The goal of this study was to determine whether a similar projection exists in cats Either wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase, a mixture of this tracer and the B subunit of cholera toxin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase, or fast blue was injected into the hypothalamus of cats Injections were centered in the hypothalamus in seven cats and did not spread to the thalamus, zona incerta or midbrain After these injections, retrogradely labeled neurons were observed bilaterally in each of the 17 spinal segments that were examined A total of approximately 400–500 labeled neurons was observed in alternate sections through these segments in the most effective cases Roughly 70% of the labeled neurons were located contralaterally Labeled neurons were found predominantly in the deep dorsal horn, the intermediate zone/ventral horn and in the area surrounding the central canal A few were also noted in the superficial dorsal horn The first and second sacral segments contained the largest numbers of retrogradely labeled neurons in the spinal cord The number of spinohypothalamic tract neurons observed in this study in cats was roughly an order of magnitude smaller than that previously reported for rats This finding suggested either that the spinohypothalamic tract is relatively small in cats or that our tracing techniques did not label many spinohypothalamic tract neurons in cats To test the sensitivity of one of our tracing techniques, control injections of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase that filled the ventrobasal thalamus were made in two cats In both cases, thousands of spinal cord neurons were labeled In summary, our results indicate that a spinohypothalamic tract exists in cats However, our findings also suggest that the total number of spinohypothalamic tract neurons in cats may be an order of magnitude smaller than it is in rats

Journal Article
TL;DR: Administration of acemannan for 6 weeks intraperitoneally to clinically symptomatic cats significantly improved both the quality of life and the survival rate.
Abstract: Feline leukemia is a disease induced by an oncornavirus infection that inevitably causes clinically affected cats to die. It has been estimated that 40% of cats are dead within 4 weeks and 70% within 8 weeks of the onset of clinical symptoms. Acemannan is a complex carbohydrate with both immunostimulatory and direct antiviral properties. Administration of acemannan for 6 weeks intraperitoneally to clinically symptomatic cats significantly improved both the quality of life and the survival rate. Twelve weeks after initiation of treatment, 71% of treated cats were alive and in good health.

Journal Article
TL;DR: The effect of methoxamine on Retrograde flow of spermatozoa into the urinary bladder of domestic cats during electroejaculation and the incidence of retrograde flow during the collection of semen with an artificial vagina, or during mating was examined.
Abstract: The effect of methoxamine on retrograde flow of spermatozoa into the urinary bladder of domestic cats during electroejaculation and the incidence of retrograde flow during the collection of semen with an artificial vagina, or during mating was examined. In experiment 1, urine collected by cystocentesis prior to electroejaculation was azoospermic or contained few, nonmotile spermatozoa, whereas urine collected after electroejaculation contained more (P = 0.002) spermatozoa, and motile spermatozoa were evident in urine obtained from 6 of 8 cats. Administration of methoxamine hydrochloride (200 micrograms/kg of body weight, IV) did not affect spermatozoal output or percentage of retrograde flow. Percentage of retrograde flow for control cats ranged from 61.18 to 92.95% (mean +/- SD, 80.00 +/- 14.28%) and for methoxamine-treated cats, ranged from 15.25 to 92.49% (mean +/- SD, 58.10 +/- 32.28%), but the difference was not significant. In experiment 2, an artificial vagina was used to collect semen from 5 of the 8 cats used in experiment 1. Urine collected by cystocentesis after ejaculation contained spermatozoa, and motile spermatozoa were evident in the urine from 4 of 5 cats. The mean (+/- SD) percentage of retrograde flow for these 5 cats was 46.82 +/- 31.67% (range, 14.56 to 90.32%). In experiment 3, each of the 5 cats that were used in experiments 1 and 2 were mated. Spermatozoa were recovered from the vagina of each mated female, and motile spermatozoa were also present in postejaculation urine obtained by cystocentesis from each of the 5 male cats. Mean total number of spermatozoa in the postmating urine was 29.42 +/- 33.58 x 10(6) (range, 0.22 x 10(6) to 76.05 x 10(6) spermatozoa).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A marked difference is revealed between the haemodynamic effects of l‐NAME in rats and cats and suggest that in cats, unlike rats, the role of the l‐arginine‐NO pathway in the regulation of blood pressure is rather limited, although such a pathway may exist in several tissues.
Abstract: 1. The haemodynamic effects of NG-nitro-L-arginine methylester (L-NAME; 1, 3, 10 and 30 mg kg-1) and its potential ability to attenuate the hypotensive responses to acetylcholine (0.03, 0.1, 1.0 and 3.0 micrograms kg-1) have been investigated in anaesthetized rats and cats. 2. In the rat, L-NAME elicited a dose-dependent pressor effect increasing mean arterial blood pressure from the baseline value of 116 +/- 4 mmHg to a maximum of 156 +/- 6 mmHg with 30 mg kg-1. This increase in blood pressure could be only partly reversed by L-arginine (300 mg kg-1). However, the increase in blood pressure by lower doses (up to 10 mg kg-1) of L-NAME was effectively reversed by L-arginine (1000 mg kg-1). 3. In the cat, L-NAME did not significantly modify systemic haemodynamic variables (heart rate, mean arterial blood pressure, cardiac output, stroke volume or total peripheral resistance), when compared to the changes in saline-treated animals. Administration of L-arginine did not cause any significant effect in cats treated with L-NAME, but some decrease in heart rate and increases in cardiac output and stroke volume were observed in the saline-treated group. 4. With the lowest dose (1 mg kg-1), L-NAME did not affect tissue blood flows in the cat, but higher doses (3 and 30 mg kg-1) significantly reduced blood flows to the mesentery, stomach, spleen, intestines, lungs and the total liver. L-Arginine (300mgkg-1) injected into the control (saline-treated) animals resulted in a significant increase in blood flow to the heart, mesentery, lungs as well as the total liver, particularly its portal fraction. L-Arginine-induced increases in tissue blood flows (mesentery, kidneys, spleen, lungs, total liver and portal blood flow) in saline-treated animals were attenuated in animals treated with L-NAME.5. The acetylcholine-induced peak hypotensive response was not reduced in rats or cats by L-NAME. The duration of acetylcholine response was, however, attenuated in both species by L-NAME. Treatment with L-arginine (10-100mg kg- 1) did not change the acetylcholine-induced hypotension.6. The above results reveal a marked difference between the haemodynamic effects of L-NAME in rats and cats and suggest that in cats, unlike rats, the role of the L-arginine-NO pathway in the regulation of blood pressure is rather limited, although such a pathway may exist in several tissues. Furthermore, the hypotensive response to acetylcholine in both species seems to be mediated largely by NO-independent pathways.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was found that during visual inspection of rats, more defensive cats displayed greater neural activity in the amygdala and the ventromedial hypothalamus than less defensive cats, who showed no change over baseline.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results of the retrospective study suggest that radiotherapy with and without chemotherapy may be effective for the treatment of localized lymphoma in the cat.
Abstract: A retrospective study was undertaken to determine the efficacy of radiotherapy with and without chemotherapy for treatment of localized lymphoma in 10 cats. Tumor location included nasal cavity (3 cats), retrobulbar area (3 cats), mediastinum (1 cat), subcutaneous tissue (1 cat), maxilla (1 cat) and mandible (1 cat). Six cats were treated with radiation alone and 4 cats also received chemotherapy during and/or after radiotherapy. Complete remission was achieved locally in 8 of 10 cats, whereas 2 cats had partial remission. Five of the 6 cats treated with radiotherapy alone achieved complete remission. Overall mean and median remission times for the 8 cats with complete remission were 123 weeks and 114 weeks, respectively (range 4 to 277 weeks). Three of the 8 cats have been in complete remission for more than 131 weeks and are still alive. Three cats achieving complete local remission developed lymphoma outside the radiation field. One cat had recurrence at the site of irradiation. Results of the retrospective study suggest that radiotherapy with and without chemotherapy may be effective for the treatment of localized lymphoma in the cat.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 1991-Blood
TL;DR: The expression of a foreign gene in cats, albeit at a low level, demonstrates that retroviral vectors can be used for gene transfer in noninbred large animal species and may be useful for gene therapy of humans.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that the pathogenesis of hypertension in SHR may be partly due to abnormal properties of glutamate receptor subtypes acting on vasomotor control neurons in the SRF.
Abstract: Using spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY) and cats, either glutamate or a glutamate receptor subtype agonist was injected into the subretrofacial nucleus (SRF) in the rostral ventrolateral medulla at the site where the pressor response had been evoked by electrical stimulation. The sensitivity of SRF neurons to the electrical stimulation or glutamate receptor agonist was estimated by the threshold current or dose required to evoke the pressor response. The threshold of SRF neurons to electrical stimulation was similar in the three animal groups, while that to the glutamate receptor agonist was different. The significance of the difference in threshold between WKY and SHR was calculated as was that between WKY and cats. The threshold for kainate stimulation was ten times lower for SHR (0.016 pmol, P less than 0.001) and five times higher for cats (0.78 pmol, P less than 0.05); that for quisqualate stimulation was fifty times lower for SHR (0.016 pmol, P less than 0.001) but similar for cats; that for NMDA stimulation was twelve times lower for SHR (0.13 pmol, P less than 0.001) but seven times higher for cats (11 pmol, P less than 0.01); that for glutamate stimulation was ten times lower for SHR (4.2 pmol, P less than 0.001) but similar for cats. The heart rate and respiratory responses associated with the pressor response were tachycardiac and hypopneic in SHR and WKY, but bradycardiac and hyperpneic in cats. These responses were less dominant than the pressor response. We suggest that the pathogenesis of hypertension in SHR may be partly due to abnormal properties of glutamate receptor subtypes acting on vasomotor control neurons in the SRF.