Four commercially available acridinium ester-labeled DNA probes directed against rRNA were evaluated for their ability to identify Blastomyces dermatitidis, Coccidioides immitis, Histoplasma capsulatum, and Cryptococcus neoformans in culture. rRNA was extracted by sonication of 1to 2-mm2 portions of cultures of fungi in two chaotropic reagents with glass beads. Following a heat inactivation step, the extracts were hybridized in solution with probes specific for each pathogen. The acridinium ester reporter moiety of nonhybridized probe was selectively hydrolyzed, and chemiluminescence of specific DNA:RNA hybrids was quantitated in relative light units with a luminometer. A positive identification required a relative light unit value of 250,000. Sensitivity and specificity of the probes were determined by probing cultures of the respective pathogenic fungi (target) and nontarget fungi. Both mycelial and yeast forms of the dimorphic fungi (B. dermatitidis and H.
Background: Commercially available, noninvasive testing options for histoplasmosis are limited outside of the United States. Objectives: To describe the diagnostic performance of a novel Histoplasma antigen enzyme immunoassay (IM EIA) for the diagnosis of histoplasmosis in dogs. Animals: Twenty dogs with histoplasmosis, 79 dogs without histoplasmosis, and 11 unclassified dogs providing 202 urine samples. Methods: This a prospective study using stored urine samples. Samples were analyzed with the IM EIA and with the commercially available Histoplasma antigen EIA (MV EIA). Dogs were classified based on final proven diagnosis and performance of the IM EIA was described and compared with the MiraVista enzyme immunoassay (MV EIA). Results: The diagnostic sensitivity (DSe), specificity (DSp), and accuracy (DAc) of the IM EIA were 70% (51%-89%), 99% (97%-100%), and 93% (81%-100%), respectively. The DSe, DSp, and DAc for the MV EIA were 95% (85%-100%), 99% (97%-100%), and 98% (95%-100%), respectively. The area under the receiver operator characteristic curve was significantly smaller for IM EIA (0.87) as compared with MV EIA (0.97, P = .03). This was primarily due to 6 false negative IM EIA results, 4 from dogs with disease localized to the gastrointestinal tract. The MV EIA was positive in 5/6 of these dogs. Conclusions and Clinical Importance: The IM EIA might be useful for the diagnosis of disseminated histoplasmosis in dogs, but clinical usefulness will be limited in dogs with histoplasmosis localized to the GI tract.
Harmful blooms of domoic acid (DA)-producing algae are a problem in oceans worldwide. DA is a potent glutamate receptor agonist that can cause status epilepticus and in survivors, temporal lobe epilepsy. In mice, one-time low-dose in utero exposure to DA was reported to cause hippocampal damage and epileptiform activity, leading to the hypothesis that unrecognized exposure to DA from contaminated seafood in pregnant women can damage the fetal hippocampus and initiate temporal lobe epileptogenesis. However, development of epilepsy (i.e., spontaneous recurrent seizures) has not been tested. In the present study, long-term seizure monitoring and histology was used to test for temporal lobe epilepsy following prenatal exposure to DA. In Experiment One, the previous study's in utero DA treatment protocol was replicated, including use of the CD-1 mouse strain. Afterward, mice were video-monitored for convulsive seizures from 2 to 6 months old. None of the CD-1 mice treated in utero with vehicle or DA was observed to experience spontaneous convulsive seizures. After seizure monitoring, mice were evaluated for pathological evidence of temporal lobe epilepsy. None of the mice treated in utero with DA displayed the hilar neuron loss that occurs in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy and in the mouse pilocarpine model of temporal lobe epilepsy. In Experiment Two, a higher dose of DA was administered to pregnant FVB mice. FVB mice were tested as a potentially more sensitive strain, because they have a lower seizure threshold, and some females spontaneously develop epilepsy. Female offspring were monitored with continuous video and telemetric bilateral hippocampal local field potential recording at 1-11 months old. A similar proportion of vehicle- and DA-treated female FVB mice spontaneously developed epilepsy, beginning in the fourth month of life. Average seizure frequency and duration were similar in both groups. Seizure frequency was lower than that of positive-control pilocarpine-treated mice, but seizure duration was similar. None of the mice treated in utero with vehicle or DA displayed hilar neuron loss or intense mossy fiber sprouting, a form of aberrant synaptic reorganization that develops in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy and in pilocarpine-treated mice. FVB mice that developed epilepsy (vehicle- and DA-treated) displayed mild mossy fiber sprouting. Results of this study suggest that a single subconvulsive dose of DA at mid-gestation does not cause temporal lobe epilepsy in mice.
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