نتایج جستجو برای: camelus dromedaries

تعداد نتایج: 1628  

2015
Zulaikha M. Al Hammadi Daniel K.W. Chu Yassir M. Eltahir Farida Al Hosani Mariam Al Mulla Wasim Tarnini Aron J. Hall Ranawaka A.P.M. Perera Mohamed M. Abdelkhalek J.S.M. Peiris Salama S. Al Muhairi Leo L.M. Poon

In May 2015 in United Arab Emirates, asymptomatic Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection was identified through active case finding in 2 men with exposure to infected dromedaries. Epidemiologic and virologic findings suggested zoonotic transmission. Genetic sequences for viruses from the men and camels were similar to those for viruses recently detected in other countries.

2017
Júlia Vergara-Alert Judith M.A. van den Brand W. Widagdo Marta Muñoz Stalin Raj Debby Schipper David Solanes Ivan Cordón Albert Bensaid Bart L. Haagmans Joaquim Segalés

Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) cases continue to be reported, predominantly in Saudi Arabia and occasionally other countries. Although dromedaries are the main reservoir, other animal species might be susceptible to MERS coronavirus (MERS-CoV) infection and potentially serve as reservoirs. To determine whether other animals are potential reservoirs, we inoculated MERS-CoV into llamas, ...

2014
Chantal B.E.M. Reusken Lilia Messadi Ashenafi Feyisa Hussaini Ularamu Gert-Jan Godeke Agom Danmarwa Fufa Dawo Mohamed Jemli Simenew Melaku David Shamaki Yusuf Woma Yiltawe Wungak Endrias Zewdu Gebremedhin Ilse Zutt Berend-Jan Bosch Bart L. Haagmans Marion P.G. Koopmans

We found serologic evidence for the circulation of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus among dromedary camels in Nigeria, Tunisia, and Ethiopia. Circulation of the virus among dromedaries across broad areas of Africa may indicate that this disease is currently underdiagnosed in humans outside the Arabian Peninsula.

2016
Anne Liljander Benjamin Meyer Joerg Jores Marcel A. Müller Erik Lattwein Ian Njeru Bernard Bett Christian Drosten Victor Max Corman

Dromedaries in Africa and elsewhere carry the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV). To search for evidence of autochthonous MERS-CoV infection in humans, we tested archived serum from livestock handlers in Kenya for MERS-CoV antibodies. Serologic evidence of infection was confirmed for 2 persons sampled in 2013 and 2014.

2013
M. A. Umaru A. Bello

This review examines the one humped camel (Camelus dromedarius) a considerable number of the dromedary about 50,000 is found in the semi-arid part of Northern Nigeria. Apart from the wide use of the camel as a draught animal the camel now serve as a source of milk, meat and hide in this region, these notes examines the anatomical basis of reproduction, pregnancy, and its diagnosis, fertility, a...

2016
José Manuel Zorrilla Matilla Zoltán Haiman Daniel Hsu Arushi Gupta Andrea Petri

We have investigated a recently proposed halo-based model, Camelus, for predicting weak-lensing peak counts, and compared its results over a collection of 162 cosmologies with those from N-body simulations. While counts from both models agree for peaks with S/N > 1 (where S/N is the ratio of the peak height to the r.m.s. shape noise), we find ≈ 50% fewer counts for peaks near S/N = 0 and signif...

2013
Saima Zubair Etienne P. de Villiers Mario Younan Göran Andersson Herve Tettelin David R. Riley Joerg Jores Erik Bongcam-Rudloff Richard P. Bishop

Streptococcus agalactiae causes a range of clinical syndromes in camels (Camelus dromedarius). We report the genome sequences of two S. agalactiae isolates that induce abscesses in Kenyan camels. These genomes provide novel data on the composition of the S. agalactiae "pan genome" and reveal the presence of multiple genomic islands.

2011
Ulrich Wernery Renate Wernery Marina Joseph Fajer Al-Salloom Bobby Johnson Joerg Kinne Shanti Jose Sherry Jose Britta Tappendorf Heidie Hornstra Holger C. Scholz

We confirm a natural infection of dromedaries with glanders. Multilocus variable number tandem repeat analysis of a Burkholderia mallei strain isolated from a diseased dromedary in Bahrain revealed close genetic proximity to strain Dubai 7, which caused an outbreak of glanders in horses in the United Arab Emirates in 2004.

2017
Muhammad Saqib Andrea Sieberg Muhammad Hammad Hussain Muhammad Khalid Mansoor Ali Zohaib Erik Lattwein Marcel Alexander Müller Christian Drosten Victor Max Corman

Dromedary camels from Africa and Arabia are an established source for zoonotic Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) infection among humans. In Pakistan, we found specific neutralizing antibodies in samples from 39.5% of 565 dromedaries, documenting significant expansion of the enzootic range of MERS-CoV to Asia.

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