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Book
Histopathology of Aquatic Animals
Authors: ---
Year: 2022 Publisher: Basel MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Abstract

Histopathological studies of aquatic animals refer to the microscopic examination of tissues and organs in order to detect deviations from the expected microscopic or macroscopic structure. Information obtained from the study of histomorphological lesions in aquatic animals can be a useful addition when determining the general state of health of aquatic animals, especially if chronic stressors and/or pathogens are present. Compared to mammals, postmortem autolysis progresses very rapidly in most aquatic organisms. This fact makes histopathological examination quite complex and demanding, not only in a histotechnical sense. A prerequisite for a successful study is the baseline knowledge of physiological processes and histological architecture of the studied species. Therefore, the aim of this Special Issue is to contribute to the current state of knowledge on the histopathology of aquatic animals and to provide a professional and encyclopedic tool for biologists and veterinarians.

Keywords

Research & information: general --- Biology, life sciences --- Fisheries & related industries --- micro-nano plastics --- fish --- organism model --- histopathology --- blood biomarkers --- microlipoma --- liver --- Barbus balcanicus --- 3D reconstruction --- nutrition --- aquaculture --- fishmeal replacement --- land animal proteins --- histology --- intestinal microbiota --- Sparus aurata --- toxicity --- effect --- invertebrate --- mussels --- Aeromonas spp. --- rainbow trout --- bacteria --- infection --- antinutritional factors --- soybean --- gut health --- environmental monitoring --- histopathological biomarkers --- histopathological alterations --- fish gills --- atrazine --- Purkinje --- cerebellum --- myocytes --- toxicology --- IP3Rs --- Vistonis Lake --- physico-chemical parameters --- gills --- HSPs --- MARKs --- Na+-K+ ATPase --- hepatorenal --- pathology --- toxicosis --- biomarkers --- adult Xenopus laevis --- micro-nano plastics --- fish --- organism model --- histopathology --- blood biomarkers --- microlipoma --- liver --- Barbus balcanicus --- 3D reconstruction --- nutrition --- aquaculture --- fishmeal replacement --- land animal proteins --- histology --- intestinal microbiota --- Sparus aurata --- toxicity --- effect --- invertebrate --- mussels --- Aeromonas spp. --- rainbow trout --- bacteria --- infection --- antinutritional factors --- soybean --- gut health --- environmental monitoring --- histopathological biomarkers --- histopathological alterations --- fish gills --- atrazine --- Purkinje --- cerebellum --- myocytes --- toxicology --- IP3Rs --- Vistonis Lake --- physico-chemical parameters --- gills --- HSPs --- MARKs --- Na+-K+ ATPase --- hepatorenal --- pathology --- toxicosis --- biomarkers --- adult Xenopus laevis


Book
Histopathology of Aquatic Animals
Authors: ---
Year: 2022 Publisher: Basel MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

Histopathological studies of aquatic animals refer to the microscopic examination of tissues and organs in order to detect deviations from the expected microscopic or macroscopic structure. Information obtained from the study of histomorphological lesions in aquatic animals can be a useful addition when determining the general state of health of aquatic animals, especially if chronic stressors and/or pathogens are present. Compared to mammals, postmortem autolysis progresses very rapidly in most aquatic organisms. This fact makes histopathological examination quite complex and demanding, not only in a histotechnical sense. A prerequisite for a successful study is the baseline knowledge of physiological processes and histological architecture of the studied species. Therefore, the aim of this Special Issue is to contribute to the current state of knowledge on the histopathology of aquatic animals and to provide a professional and encyclopedic tool for biologists and veterinarians.

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