Comparison between two staining techniques using cellular reactions of trombiculid mites lesion

The larval stage of trombiculid mites are parasitic and cause skin lesions in many species of vertebrates including man. The nymphs and adults are found on the ground and are not parasitic. In Malaysia, poultry kept under free range system are commonly infested with trombiculid mites. The clinical s...

ver descrição completa

Na minha lista:
Detalhes bibliográficos
Main Authors: Zulkapli, Maria, Babjee, Shaik Mohamed Amin, Tengku Ibrahim, Tengku Azmi
Formato: Conference or Workshop Item
Idioma:English
Publicado em: 2011
Acesso em linha:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/27282/1/Proceedings%2034.pdf
Tags: Adicionar Tag
Sem tags, seja o primeiro a adicionar uma tag!
id oai:psasir.upm.edu.my:27282
record_format eprints
spelling oai:psasir.upm.edu.my:27282 http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/27282/ Comparison between two staining techniques using cellular reactions of trombiculid mites lesion Zulkapli, Maria Babjee, Shaik Mohamed Amin Tengku Ibrahim, Tengku Azmi The larval stage of trombiculid mites are parasitic and cause skin lesions in many species of vertebrates including man. The nymphs and adults are found on the ground and are not parasitic. In Malaysia, poultry kept under free range system are commonly infested with trombiculid mites. The clinical sign shown include hyperkeratosis and swelling of the epidermis. Sixteen Red Jungle fowls with typical lesions of trombiculid mites were brought in for postmortem in this study. The gross lesions observed were hyperkeratosis and edematous swelling of the skin. The lesions can be classified into two, which are active and regressing lesions. Skin samples were taken from each bird for histopathology study. Two fixatives were used which were; 10% Normal Buffered Formalin and Helly’s fluid and stained with two different stains, namely Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) and Giemsa stains. The comparison was done based on the anatomical changes in skin tissue sections and the visibility of cellular reaction between these two fixatives and stains.Eight hundred and thirty-one lesions were found on all ventral body areas of the 16 birds examined. The number of lesions per bird ranged from 19 to 119. The larvae were orange in colour, oval-like shape, with their head burrowed into the lesions. A total of 4731 trombiculid larvae were counted in the birds. The mite number ranged from 50 to 635. The average number of lesions per bird was 51 and the average number of mites per bird was 295. Histopathologically, there was hyperkeratosis of the epidermal layer with the stylostome burrowed within anuclear keratin layer of the skin which can be seen under low magnification. Numerous inflammatory cells infiltrated in the epidermis surrounding the stylostome. The refractility of eosinophils granules was clearer in Helly’s stained with H&E as compared to 10% formalin with similar stains under 100 x magnification. However, there was no significant difference in cell count for scoring cellular reaction in both fixatives and stains. In conclusion, there was a minor difference in appearance of cellular reaction in trombiculid mite lesions using two different fixatives and stains. However, there was no significant difference in the cell numbers for 10% formalin and Helly’s-fixed tissues. 2011-01-11 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/27282/1/Proceedings%2034.pdf Zulkapli, Maria and Babjee, Shaik Mohamed Amin and Tengku Ibrahim, Tengku Azmi (2011) Comparison between two staining techniques using cellular reactions of trombiculid mites lesion. In: 6th Seminar on Veterinary Sciences, 11-14 Jan. 2011, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Universiti Putra Malaysia. (p. 124).
institution UPM IR
collection UPM IR
language English
description The larval stage of trombiculid mites are parasitic and cause skin lesions in many species of vertebrates including man. The nymphs and adults are found on the ground and are not parasitic. In Malaysia, poultry kept under free range system are commonly infested with trombiculid mites. The clinical sign shown include hyperkeratosis and swelling of the epidermis. Sixteen Red Jungle fowls with typical lesions of trombiculid mites were brought in for postmortem in this study. The gross lesions observed were hyperkeratosis and edematous swelling of the skin. The lesions can be classified into two, which are active and regressing lesions. Skin samples were taken from each bird for histopathology study. Two fixatives were used which were; 10% Normal Buffered Formalin and Helly’s fluid and stained with two different stains, namely Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) and Giemsa stains. The comparison was done based on the anatomical changes in skin tissue sections and the visibility of cellular reaction between these two fixatives and stains.Eight hundred and thirty-one lesions were found on all ventral body areas of the 16 birds examined. The number of lesions per bird ranged from 19 to 119. The larvae were orange in colour, oval-like shape, with their head burrowed into the lesions. A total of 4731 trombiculid larvae were counted in the birds. The mite number ranged from 50 to 635. The average number of lesions per bird was 51 and the average number of mites per bird was 295. Histopathologically, there was hyperkeratosis of the epidermal layer with the stylostome burrowed within anuclear keratin layer of the skin which can be seen under low magnification. Numerous inflammatory cells infiltrated in the epidermis surrounding the stylostome. The refractility of eosinophils granules was clearer in Helly’s stained with H&E as compared to 10% formalin with similar stains under 100 x magnification. However, there was no significant difference in cell count for scoring cellular reaction in both fixatives and stains. In conclusion, there was a minor difference in appearance of cellular reaction in trombiculid mite lesions using two different fixatives and stains. However, there was no significant difference in the cell numbers for 10% formalin and Helly’s-fixed tissues.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Zulkapli, Maria
Babjee, Shaik Mohamed Amin
Tengku Ibrahim, Tengku Azmi
spellingShingle Zulkapli, Maria
Babjee, Shaik Mohamed Amin
Tengku Ibrahim, Tengku Azmi
Comparison between two staining techniques using cellular reactions of trombiculid mites lesion
author_facet Zulkapli, Maria
Babjee, Shaik Mohamed Amin
Tengku Ibrahim, Tengku Azmi
author_sort Zulkapli, Maria
title Comparison between two staining techniques using cellular reactions of trombiculid mites lesion
title_short Comparison between two staining techniques using cellular reactions of trombiculid mites lesion
title_full Comparison between two staining techniques using cellular reactions of trombiculid mites lesion
title_fullStr Comparison between two staining techniques using cellular reactions of trombiculid mites lesion
title_full_unstemmed Comparison between two staining techniques using cellular reactions of trombiculid mites lesion
title_sort comparison between two staining techniques using cellular reactions of trombiculid mites lesion
publishDate 2011
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/27282/1/Proceedings%2034.pdf
_version_ 1819295021815300096
score 13.4562235