Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira ()

Healing of brain lesions in sheep recovered from amprolium-induced polioencephalomalacia

  • Juliana P.L. Paula,
  • Paula V. Leal,
  • Rayane C. Pupin,
  • Stephanie C. Lima,
  • Marcos A.S. Souza,
  • Alexandre A. Santos,
  • Ricardo A.A. Lemos,
  • Danilo C. Gomes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-5150-pvb-5455
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38, no. 5
pp. 806 – 810

Abstract

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ABSTRACT: To evaluate the outcome of acute lesions in the brains of sheep that completely clinically recover from acute polioencephalomalacia (PEM), ten sheep were used in this experiment. Eight of those sheep received varying doses of amprolium to induce PEM. Four sheep were treated intramuscularly with 40mg/kg/body weight with thiamine to allow recovery and four sheep were left untreated. Two control sheep did not receive either amprolium or thiamine and were kept along with the other eight sheep for the duration of the experiment. Except for the two drugs, the diet and water source were the same for the ten sheep. Two sheep receiving high daily doses of amprolium and one sheep receiving a lower dose had acute deaths and developed acute brain lesions consisting of neuronal laminar cortical necrosis (red neurons), edema, reactive astrocytes, swollen endothelial cells and gitter cells infiltration. Four sheep that recovered from lower doses of amprolium-induced PEM after being treated with thiamine and another one that recovered spontaneously were euthanatized six months after clinical recovery and had gross changes consisting of segmental absence of cortical tissue. Histologically these segmental cortex-deprived areas corresponded to quasi-empty spaces where only vessels and gitter cells existed. No changes were seen in the brains of the two control sheep.

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