Abstract
A total of 307 brains of purebred sows obtained from an abattoir were retrospectively examined. These sows were culled with reasons of reproductive failure, urogenital infections, or locomotor problems. The most common macroscopic lesions were cavitations or lacunae in the basal nuclei (9.1%, 28/307) and coarse and thickened leptomeninges with marked vessels (3.9%, 12/307). The most frequent microscopic lesion was polyarteritis nodosa (21.2%, 65/307), which was found in all 40 brains with the above-mentioned gross lesions and in all 25 brains with microscopic cerebral infarcts or cavitations. The affected arteries of polyarteritis nodosa were distributed primarily in the cerebral leptomeninges, basal nuclei, and internal and external capsules. Histopathologically, a characteristic change of the affected arteries was transmural fibrinoid necrosis with severe infiltration of mixed inflammatory cells; narrowing or occlusion of the lumen. The inflammatory cells were chiefly composed of lymphocytes, macrophages, and plasma cells, with a few eosinophils and occasional multinucleated giant cells. Polyarteritis nodosa was found at a high percentage in the brains from culled sows. It may result in cerebral ischemia, infarcts, and hemorrhage, and possibly play a role in the necessity for culling due to locomotor problems.
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