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      Interpreting pathologies in extant and extinct archosaurs using micro-CT

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          Abstract

          Palaeopathology offers unique insight to the healing strategies of extinct organisms, permitting questions concerning bone physiology to be answered in greater depth. Unfortunately, most palaeopathological studies are confined to external morphological interpretations due to the destructive nature of traditional methods of study. This limits the degree of reliable diagnosis and interpretation possible. X-ray MicroTomography (micro-CT, XMT) provides a non-destructive means of analysing the internal three-dimensional structure of pathologies in both extant and extinct individuals, at higher resolutions than possible with medical scanners. In this study, we present external and internal descriptions of pathologies in extant and extinct archosaurs using XMT. This work demonstrates that the combination of external/internal diagnosis that X-ray microtomography facilitates is crucial when differentiating between pathological conditions. Furthermore, we show that the use of comparative species, both through direct analysis and from the literature, provides key information for diagnosing between vertebrate groups in the typical pathological conditions and physiological processes. Micro-CT imaging, combined with comparative observations of extant species, provides more detailed and reliable interpretation of palaeopathologies. Micro-CT is an increasingly accessible tool, which will provide key insights for correctly interpreting vertebrate pathologies in the future.

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          Most cited references45

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          Rapid growth problems: ascites and skeletal deformities in broilers.

          Over the last 40 yr, genetic selection for rapid growth and improved feed efficiency has been very effective in meat-type poultry. Combined with changes in the feed that have increased both the nutritional and physical density to encourage a high nutrient intake, growth rate has more than doubled. The effect of genetic selection for high muscle to bone ratio and high calorie intake of a ration that supplies all nutritional requirements causes significant mortality from cardiovascular disease. In the chicken, sudden death syndrome (flip-over) and pulmonary hypertension syndrome resulting in ascites are the most important. Ruptured aorta, spontaneous turkey cardiomyopathy (round heart), and cardiomyopathy causing sudden death produce high mortality in turkeys. Rapid growth induced by high nutrient intake alone can cause severe lameness, bone defects, and deformity, as these problems are seen in animals that have not been selected for rapid growth: dogs, horses, pigs, ratites and wild birds kept in zoologic gardens. In meat-type poultry, growth-related disease can be reduced or eliminated by reducing feed intake without affecting final body weight. Rapid growth alone may not be the pathogenic mechanism that results in cardiovascular or musculoskeletal defects. Metabolic imbalance induced by high nutrient intake may cause some of the conditions. These metabolic problems might be corrected without reducing growth rate.
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            Avian heterophils in inflammation and disease resistance.

            BG Harmon (1998)
            Heterophils are the predominate granulated leukocyte in the acute inflammatory response in gallinaceous birds. Heterophils are highly phagocytic and are capable of a broad spectrum of antimicrobial activity. They accumulate in inflamed tissue, causing tissue damage and forming heterophil granulomas that are morphologically similar to inflammatory lesions in reptiles. The avian heterophil lacks myeloperoxidase and depends primarily on nonoxidative mechanisms for antimicrobial activity. The beta-defensins found in heterophil granules can kill a wide variety of bacterial pathogens and are a major component of the heterophil antimicrobial arsenal. Heterophils form the first line of cellular defense against invading microbial pathogens in the lungs and air sacs where resident macrophages are lacking.
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              Nature and rate of neoplasia found in captive wild mammals, birds, and reptiles at necropsy.

              The nature and rate of neoplasia found at necropsy of captive wild animals of the Zoological Society of San Diego collection were studied. Neoplasia was present at necropsy in 2.75% of 3,127 mammals, 1.89% of 5,957 birds, and 2.19% of 1,233 reptiles. Neoplasms were not detected during 198 necropsies of amphibians. Gross and histologic examinations were performed on the 92 mammalian, 111 avian, and 28 reptilian neoplasms. The lesions were diagnosed. The findings findings included a high frequency of lymphosarcomas in birds and reptiles, multiple lung adenomas in mammals, multiple endocrine tumors in 2 European mouflons (Ovis musimon), and proliferative lesions of the biliary and pancreatic ductal systems in several species.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                PeerJ Inc. (San Francisco, USA )
                2167-8359
                28 July 2015
                2015
                : 3
                : e1130
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Earth, Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences, University of Manchester , Manchester, UK
                [2 ]Manchester X-ray Imaging Facility, School of Materials, University of Manchester , Manchester, UK
                Article
                1130
                10.7717/peerj.1130
                4525691
                26246971
                4fee54ff-4405-4b50-a7cd-e64c0a516d71
                © 2015 Anné et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.

                History
                : 5 May 2015
                : 6 July 2015
                Funding
                Funded by: The University of Manchester Dean’s Award
                Funded by: Jurassic Foundation
                Funded by: EPSRC
                Award ID: EP/F007906/1
                Award ID: EP/F001452/1
                Award ID: EP/I02249X/1
                This project was partially funded by the Jurassic Foundation. Jennifer Anné is funded by the Dean’s Award (University of Manchester). The MXIF facilities are partially funded by a number of EPSRC grants, including EP/F007906/1, EP/F001452/1 and EP/I02249X/1. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
                Categories
                Paleontology
                Veterinary Medicine
                Zoology
                Histology

                palaeopathology,micro-ct,archosaur
                palaeopathology, micro-ct, archosaur

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