Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"A. M. Pocknell"'
Publikováno v:
Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery. 19:853-859
Objectives There is a distinct subset of lesions arising on the digits of cats, located at or close to the nail-bed epithelium, which are typically composed of proliferative fibroblast-like cells, multinucleate giant cells and areas of osseous metapl
Autor:
Andrew A. Cunningham, J.R. Baker, F. E. Howie, R. J. Reid, A. M. Pocknell, H. M. Ross, I. A. P. Patterson, Rob Deaville, A. Colloff, Paul Jepson
Publikováno v:
Veterinary Pathology. 42:291-305
The first evidence suggestive of in vivo gas bubble formation in cetacea, including eight animals stranded in the UK, has recently been reported. This article presents the pathologic findings from these eight UK-stranded cetaceans and two additional
Publikováno v:
Journal of Small Animal Practice. 42:557-560
An eight-year-old neutered female Persian cat with a four-year history of relapsing skin disease, characterised by ulcerated nodules with a yellow granular discharge, was examined. A diagnosis of granulomatous dermatitis and panniculitis (pseudomycet
Publikováno v:
The Journal of small animal practice. 43(8)
Two middle-aged dogs were presented with bilateral severe ulcerative otitis externa without previous history of disease or evidence of other skin disease. Based on the exclusion of microbial infection and other primary causes, histopathological findi
Publikováno v:
Veterinary pathology. 33(3)
Avian tuberculosis was diagnosed in two young adult female commercial emus ( Dromaius novaehollandiae) with granulomatous conjunctivitis. Histologically, the granulomas appeared typical of avian tuberculosis. Caseonecrotic cores were surrounded by a
Autor:
Manuel Arbelo, A. Espinosa, F. E. Howie, J.R. Baker, Pedro Herráez, I. A. P. Patterson, Vidal Martín, H. M. Ross, Pedro Castro, E. Degollada, Andrew A. Cunningham, Paul Jepson, Antonio Fernández, Rob Deaville, Francisco Rodríguez, José Raduan Jaber, A. M. Pocknell, R. J. Reid
Publikováno v:
Nature. 425:575-576
Was sonar responsible for a spate of whale deaths after an Atlantic military exercise? There are spatial and temporal links between some mass strandings of cetaceans — predominantly beaked whales — and the deployment of military sonar1,2,3. Here
Autor:
Vidal Martín, R. J. Reid, I. A. P. Patterson, J. R. Baker, F. E. Howie, E. Degollada, Pedro Castro, R. Deaville, Manuel Arbelo, Pedro Herráez, H. M. Ross, E. Rodríguez, P. D. Jepson, A. Espinosa, A. M. Pocknell, Antonio Fernández, A. A. Cunningham, José Raduan Jaber
Publikováno v:
Nature. 428:2-2
Jepson et al. reply — We did not, as Piantadosi and Thalmann suggest1, present our findings as conclusive evidence of decompression sickness (DCS). We stated neither that DCS occurs naturally in cetaceans, nor that exposure to active sonar increase