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result(s) for
"Jarrett, Oswald"
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Rapid Resolution of Non-Effusive Feline Infectious Peritonitis Uveitis with an Oral Adenosine Nucleoside Analogue and Feline Interferon Omega
by
Jarrett, Oswald
,
Covell-Ritchie, Johanna
,
Fosbery, Mark
in
acetates
,
adenosine
,
adenosine nucleoside analogue
2020
This is the first report of a successful treatment of a non-effusive feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) uveitis case using an oral adenosine nucleoside analogue drug and feline interferon omega, and alpha-1 acid glycoprotein (AGP) as an indicator of recovery. A 2-year-old male neutered Norwegian Forest Cat presented with uveitis, keratic precipitates, mesenteric lymphadenopathy and weight loss. The cat was hypergammaglobulinaemic and had a non-regenerative anaemia. Feline coronavirus (FCoV) RNA was detected in a mesenteric lymph node fine-needle aspirate by a reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction—non-effusive FIP was diagnosed. Prednisolone acetate eye drops were administered three times daily for 2 weeks. Oral adenosine nucleoside analogue (Mutian) treatment started. Within 50 days of Mutian treatment, the cat had gained over one kilogram in weight, his globulin level reduced from 77 to 51 g/L and his haematocrit increased from 22 to 35%; his uveitis resolved and his sight improved. Serum AGP level reduced from 3100 to 400 μg/mL (within normal limits). Symmetric dimethylarginine (SDMA) was above normal at 28 μg/dL, reducing to 14 μg/dL on the cessation of treatment; whether the SDMA increase was due to FIP lesions in the kidney or Mutian is unknown. Mutian treatment stopped and low-dose oral recombinant feline interferon omega begun—the cat’s recovery continued.
Journal Article
Stopping Feline Coronavirus Shedding Prevented Feline Infectious Peritonitis
by
Addie, Diane D.
,
Covell-Ritchie, Johanna
,
Crowe, Ben
in
Animals
,
Antibodies
,
Antiviral agents
2023
After an incubation period of weeks to months, up to 14% of cats infected with feline coronavirus (FCoV) develop feline infectious peritonitis (FIP): a potentially lethal pyogranulomatous perivasculitis. The aim of this study was to find out if stopping FCoV faecal shedding with antivirals prevents FIP. Guardians of cats from which FCoV had been eliminated at least 6 months earlier were contacted to find out the outcome of their cats; 27 households were identified containing 147 cats. Thirteen cats were treated for FIP, 109 cats shed FCoV and 25 did not; a 4–7-day course of oral GS-441524 antiviral stopped faecal FCoV shedding. Follow-up was from 6 months to 3.5 years; 11 of 147 cats died, but none developed FIP. A previous field study of 820 FCoV-exposed cats was used as a retrospective control group; 37 of 820 cats developed FIP. The difference was statistically highly significant (p = 0.0062). Cats from eight households recovered from chronic FCoV enteropathy. Conclusions: the early treatment of FCoV-infected cats with oral antivirals prevented FIP. Nevertheless, should FCoV be re-introduced into a household, then FIP can result. Further work is required to establish the role of FCoV in the aetiology of feline inflammatory bowel disease.
Journal Article
Hugh Munro Pirie
2018
A world-renowned investigative veterinary pathologist who made an outstanding contribution to education and research.
Journal Article
N. C. Craig Sharp
by
Boyd, Jack
,
Wright, Norman
,
Jarrett, Oswald
in
Careers
,
Extracurricular activities
,
Olympic games
2018
A vet whose journey took him from veterinary physiology, through pathology to sports science, a field in which he was world-renowned.A vet whose journey took him from veterinary physiology, through pathology to sports science, a field in which he was world-renowned.
Journal Article
Audrey Iris Peniston
2019
Dedicated to her profession, she did not spare her words when animals were mishandled.
Journal Article
History of One Health and One Medicine
2014
Recent major infrastructure developments at the veterinary school, which have highlighted its commitment to One Health/One Medicine, have been the Henry Wellcome Building for Comparative Medical Sciences (2004) and the new MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research (2014), the director of which, Massimo Palmarini, is a veterinary graduate.
Journal Article
Neuropathology associated with feline immunodeficiency virus infection highlights prominent lymphocyte trafficking through both the blood-brain and blood-choroid plexus barriers
by
Grimes, Terence
,
Mabruk, Mohamad JEMF
,
Ryan, Gavin
in
Animals
,
Biological and medical sciences
,
Blood vessels
2005
Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) infection in the cat is a well-evaluated model of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 infection in man with both viruses associated with significant neuropathology. Although studies in both HIV and FIV infections have shown that virus enters the brain in the acute stages of disease, little is known of the mechanisms of viral entry. The dissection of this stage is fundamental to the development of therapies that may prevent or modulate central nervous system (CNS) infection. The present study was designed to characterize the early sequential neuropathological changes following infection with FIVGL8, a strain known to enter the CNS in acute infection. Cats were infected either by the intraperitoneal (n = 13) or intravenous (n = 12) route with 2000 cat infectious units of virus. Histopathological assessments following intraperitoneal infections were at 4 (n = 2), 5 (n = 1), 8 (n = 3), 10 (n = 1), 16 (n = 1), 32 (n = 2), 52 (n = 2), and 104 (n = 1) weeks post infection whereas animals infected intravenously were examined (n = 3) at 1, 4, 10, and 23 weeks post infection. The most significant lesions following both routes of infection were lymphocyte-rich perivascular infiltrates within cerebral and cerebellar meninges, in choroid plexus and spinal cord dura mater and within epineurium of the sciatic nerve. In addition, following intravenous infection perivascular infiltrations were noted in parenchymal blood vessels primarily of cerebral white matter. Infiltrates were composed of CD79+ B cells and CD3+ T cells. The latter population contained a mixture of CD4+ and CD8+ cells. The severity of lesions increased in intensity in the 8- to 16-week period following infection and then began to wane. The evaluation of this large group of cats at multiple time points revealed pathology comparable with that of early stage HIV-1-associated encephalitis. Moreover, in contrast to previous FIV neuropathology studies, transient meningeal, choroid plexus, and parenchymal vascular pathology were consistent significant findings suggesting that, as in HIV-1 infection, blood-brain barrier and choroid plexus brain barrier integrity are both compromised in early infection.
Journal Article
Prime-boost vaccination using DNA and whole inactivated virus vaccines provides limited protection against virulent feline immunodeficiency virus
by
Bruce, Jennifer
,
Golder, Matthew C.
,
Dunham, Stephen P.
in
Animals
,
Antibodies, Viral - analysis
,
Antibodies, Viral - biosynthesis
2006
Protection against feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) has been achieved using a variety of vaccines notably whole inactivated virus (WIV) and DNA. However protection against more virulent isolates, typical of those encountered in natural infections, has been difficult to achieve. In an attempt to improve protection against virulent FIV
GL8, we combined both DNA and WIV vaccines in a “prime-boost” approach. Thirty cats were divided into four groups receiving vaccinations and one unvaccinated control group. Following viral challenge, two vaccinated animals, one receiving DNA alone and one the prime-boost vaccine remained free of viraemia, whilst all controls became viraemic. Animals vaccinated with WIV showed apparent early enhancement of infection at 2 weeks post challenge (pc) with higher plasma viral RNA loads than control animals or cats immunised with DNA alone. Despite this, animals vaccinated with WIV or DNA alone showed significantly lower proviral loads in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and mesenteric lymph node cells, whilst those receiving the DNA–WIV prime-boost vaccine showed significantly lower proviral loads in PBMC, than control animals, at 35 weeks pc. Therefore both DNA and WIV vaccines conferred limited protection against viral challenge but the combination of WIV and DNA in a prime-boost approach appeared to offer no significant advantage over either vaccine alone.
Journal Article
A vector expressing feline mature IL-18 fused to IL-1β antagonist protein signal sequence is an effective adjuvant to a DNA vaccine for feline leukaemia virus
by
O’Donovan, Lucy H.
,
Argyle, David J.
,
Golder, Mathew C.
in
Applied microbiology
,
Biological and medical sciences
,
Cytokine
2005
DNA vaccination using vectors expressing the
gag/pol and
env genes of feline leukaemia virus (FeLV) and plasmids encoding feline interleukin-12 (IL-12) and IL-18 completely protected cats from viraemia following challenge [Hanlon L, Argyle D, Bain D, Nicolson L, Dunham S, Golder MC, et al. Feline leukaemia virus DNA vaccine efficacy is enhanced by coadministration with interleukin-12 (IL-12) and IL-18 expression vectors. J Virol 2001;75:8424–33]. However, the relative contribution of each cytokine gene towards protection is unknown. This study aimed to resolve this issue. IL-12 and IL-18 constructs were modified to ensure effective expression, and bioactivity was demonstrated using specific assays. Kittens were immunised intramuscularly with FeLV DNA and various cytokine constructs. Together with control kittens, these were challenged oronasally with FeLV and monitored for 15 weeks. All six kittens given FeLV, IL-12 and IL-18 were protected from the establishment of persistent viraemia and four from latent infection. Of six kittens immunised with FeLV DNA and IL-18, all were protected from viraemia and five from latent infection. In contrast, three of five kittens given FeLV DNA and IL-12 became persistently viraemic. Therefore, the adjuvant effect on the FeLV DNA vaccine appears to reside in the expression of IL-18.
Journal Article
Protection against feline immunodeficiency virus using replication defective proviral DNA vaccines with feline interleukin-12 and -18
by
Hanlon, Linda
,
Harbour, David A
,
Macdonald, Julie
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Animals
,
Antibodies, Viral - biosynthesis
2002
A molecular clone of the Glasgow-8 isolate of FIV (FIV
GL8) was rendered replication defective by an in-frame deletion in either reverse transcriptase (ΔRT) or integrase (ΔIN) genes for use as DNA vaccines. To test the ability of these multi-gene vaccines to protect against two feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) isolates of differing virulence, cats were immunized using either DNA vaccine alone or co-administered with interleukin-12 (IL-12) and/or interleukin-18 (IL-18) cytokine DNA. Animals were challenged sequentially with FIV-Petaluma (FIV
PET) an FIV isolate of relatively low virulence and subsequently with the more virulent FIV
GL8. A proportion of vaccinates (5/18 ΔIN and 2/12 ΔRT) were protected against primary challenge with FIV
PET. Five of the vaccinated-protected cats were re-challenged with FIV
PET; four (all ΔIN) remained free of viraemia whilst all naive controls became viraemic. Following subsequent challenge with the more virulent FIV
GL8 these four vaccinated-protected animals all became viraemic but showed lower proviral loads than naive cats. This study suggests that while our current DNA vaccines may not produce sterilizing immunity against more virulent isolates of FIV, they may nevertheless significantly reduce the impact of infection.
Journal Article