نتایج جستجو برای: fowl cholera

تعداد نتایج: 13857  

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2000
R J Kuykindoll H Nishimura D B Thomason S K Nishimoto

Fowl show spontaneous elevation of blood pressure and neointimal plaque formation in the abdominal aorta at young ages. A similar neointima can be induced by a balloon-catheter-induced endothelium injury to the fowl aorta. Both spontaneously developed and injury-induced vascular lesions exhibit subendothelial hyperplasia consisting of neointimal cells with a synthetic phenotype and abundant ext...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 2013
Marina Harper Frank St Michael Marietta John Evgeny Vinogradov Jennifer A Steen Lieke van Dorsten Jason A Steen Conny Turni Patrick J Blackall Ben Adler Andrew D Cox John D Boyce

Pasteurella multocida is a Gram-negative multispecies pathogen and the causative agent of fowl cholera, a serious disease of poultry which can present in both acute and chronic forms. The major outer membrane component lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is both an important virulence factor and a major immunogen. Our previous studies determined the LPS structures expressed by different P. multocida strai...

2011
Rajeev Ranjan M. K. Gupta

Pasteurella multocida is associated with hemorrhagic septicaemia in cattle and buffaloes, pneumonic pasteurellosis in sheep and goats, fowl cholera in poultry, atrophic rhinitis in pigs and snuffles in rabbits. Haemorrhagic septicaemia is caused by Pasteurella multocida type B:2, B:2,5 and B:5 in Asian countries and type E:2 in African countries. Pasteurella multocida have five types of capsula...

Journal: :Veterinary microbiology 2002
C Dahl A Permin J P Christensen M Bisgaard A P Muhairwa K M D Petersen J S D Poulsen A L Jensen

Pasteurella multocida and Ascaridia galli are observed with high prevalences in free range chickens in Denmark, but the impact is unknown. A study was carried out to examine the interaction between A. galli and P. multocida in chickens and the impact on production. Five groups, each with 20 18-week-old Lohmann Brown chickens were infected. Group 1 was orally infected with 1000+/-50 embryonated ...

Journal: :The British journal of ophthalmology 1977
H R Taylor A J Turner

A case of human fowl plague keratoconjunctivitis occurred after accidental laboratory exposure. The conjunctivitis was characterised by follicle formation and a mucopurulent discharge, and ran a self-limiting course over two weeks. The keratitis was of an unusual type and consisted of small intraepithelial opacities, which appeared after one week and resolved completely over the next three week...

2013
David W. Oates Eva A. Wallner-Pendleton Ivan Kanev Mauritz C. Sterner Henry E. Cerny Megan Collins Richard Bischof Ed D. Boyd

During the 1997-98 fall hunting season, samples from 154 Wild Turkeys were donated by hunters to the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission (NGPC) Genetic and Forensic Laboratory. Assistance was provided by the Veterinary Diagnostic Center, and the Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, for this survey of infectious diseases and internal parasites. One hundred...

2015
Kangpeng Xiao Qing Liu Xueyan Liu Yunlong Hu Xinxin Zhao Qingke Kong Charles A. Collyer

Pasteurella multocida (P. multocida) is an animal pathogen of worldwide economic significance that causes fowl cholera in poultry and wild birds. Global gene regulators, including PhoP are important in regulating bacterial virulence and are good targets for developing attenuated vaccines against many pathogenic bacteria. However, the biological significance of phoP gene has not been identified ...

2010
Jim A. Stunkard

This chapter provides brief descriptions of diseases that 1) more commonly are found in small, backyard poultry flocks, or 2) are more significant economically or personally when they do occur. Further reading on these and many other diseases is recommended. All Poultry Types. Two important diseases shared by chickens, turkeys, guinea fowl, partridges, pheasants, quail, and domestic waterfowl (...

Journal: :Avian diseases 1996
I M Pruimboom R B Rimler M R Ackermann K A Brogden

Serogroup A strains of Pasteurella multocida, the major cause of fowl cholera, are resistant to phagocytosis in nonimmunized birds. Adherence studies with a capsulated strain of P. multocida (serotype A:3) and turkey air sac macrophages in culture showed that the bacteria were capable of adhering in large numbers to the macrophages but were not internalized. A noncapsulated variant of the bacte...

Journal: :archives of clinical infectious diseases 0
mohammad hossein baghianimoghadam department of social health, yazd university of medical sciences, yazd, ir iran; department of social health, yazd university of medical sciences, yazd, ir iran. email: mohammad hasan ehrampoush department of environmental health, yazd university of medical sciences, yazd, ir iran behnam baghianimoghadam department of social health, yazd university of medical sciences, yazd, ir iran

background cholera is a bacterial infection that causes both local outbreaks and worldwide pandemics. there was a cholera epidemic in iran in summer 2005, during which 1118 individuals were infected and 11 died. the present study was conducted to determine the impact of educational activities of iranian ministry of health on the people's knowledge and attitude towards the disease. patients and ...

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