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Ganglion Cytology: A Novel Rapid Method for the Diagnosis of Equine Dysautonomia.

Chiara PiccinelliRachel JagoElspeth M Milne
Published in: Veterinary pathology (2018)
Equine dysautonomia (grass sickness) is characterized by autonomic neuronal degeneration and is often fatal. As outbreaks occur, rapid diagnosis is essential but confirmation currently requires histological examination. This study evaluated diagnostic accuracy of cytological examination of cranial cervical ganglion (CCG) scrapings for dysautonomia diagnosis. CCG smears from 20 controls and 16 dysautonomia cases were stained with May-Grünwald Giemsa (MGG), hematoxylin and eosin (HE), and cresyl fast violet (CFV), with HE-stained histological sections of CCG as gold standard for diagnosis. Examining all 3 stains together, the sensitivity and specificity were 100%. Occasional individual smears (4/107, 3.7%) were nondiagnostic due to low cellularity, and in a few individual smears the final diagnosis was correct but more tentative (CFV: 5/33 [15.1%], HE: 2/34 [5.9%], and MGG: 4/36 [11.1%]), due to low cellularity or suboptimal cell morphology. CCG cytology was considered reliable for rapid postmortem diagnosis of equine dysautonomia, particularly using MGG.
Keyphrases
  • stem cells
  • fine needle aspiration
  • neuropathic pain
  • bone marrow
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • single cell
  • heart rate variability
  • blood brain barrier
  • cell therapy
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • optical coherence tomography