نتایج جستجو برای: babesia caballi

تعداد نتایج: 2345  

Journal: :Veterinary parasitology 2010
Chengming Wang Sudhir K Ahluwalia Yihang Li Dongya Gao Anil Poudel Erfan Chowdhury Mary K Boudreaux Bernhard Kaltenboeck

Babesia gibsoni and Babesia canis are the etiological agents of canine babesiosis, a protozoal hemolytic disease with global significance. Canine babesiosis has been diagnosed by microscopic identification of intra-erythrocytic trophozoites in blood smear, and by serological testing. Here we developed a quantitative fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-PCR that amplifies a fragment of ...

2011
Mariana Granziera Spolidorio Mariana de Medeiros Torres Wilma Neres da Silva Campos Andréia Lima Tomé Melo Michelle Igarashi Alexandre Mendes Amude Marcelo Bahia Labruna Daniel Moura Aguiar

The objective of this study was to report for the first time infection by Hepatozoon spp. and Babesia spp. in 10 dogs from the city of Cuiabá, State of Mato Grosso, central-western Brazil. A pair of primers that amplifies a 574 bp fragment of the 18S rRNA of Hepatozoon spp., and a pair of primers that amplifies a 551 bp fragment of the gene 18S rRNA for Babesia spp. were used. Six dogs were pos...

2013
Mousa Tavassoli Mohammad Tabatabaei Mosleh Mohammadi Bijan Esmaeilnejad Hemn Mohamadpour

BACKGROUND Babesiosis is a haemoparasitic disease of domestic and wild animals caused by species of the genus Babesia. Babesia bigemina, B. bovis and B. divergens are known to be pathogenic in cattle. The disease is transmitted during blood feeding by infected ticks and is the most economically important tick-borne disease in tropical and subtropical areas. Ixodid ticks are vectors in the trans...

2016
F. Sánchez-Vizcaíno M. Wardeh B. Heayns D. A. Singleton J. S. P. Tulloch L. McGinley J. Newman P. J. Noble M. J. Day P. H. Jones A. D. Radford

Recent publications highlighting autochthonous Babesia canis infection in dogs from Essex that have not travelled outside the UK are a powerful reminder of the potential for pathogen emergence in new populations. Here the authors use electronic health data collected from two diagnostic laboratories and a network of 392 veterinary premises to describe canine Babesia cases and levels of Babesia c...

Journal: :Parasite 1999
J Viseras C I Lugaresi M M Volpogni A A Guglielmone

Combined inoculation of cattle with vaccine strains of Babesia bigemina and Babesia bovis induced lower antibody titers to B. bigemina than to B. bovis (previous study). Three groups of heifers were used to detect if the low antibody level was due to competition between Babesia species: individuals of G1 and G2 were inoculated with 10 million B. bigemina and B. bovis, respectively, and those of...

Journal: :Parasitology 2017
Kifaya Azmi Amer Al-Jawabreh Abedelmajeed Nasereddin Ahmad Abdelkader Taher Zaid Suheir Ereqat Samer S Sawalha Gad Baneth Ziad Abdeen

Dogs serve as hosts for a great number of parasites, which may affect their health and wellbeing. This study aimed to observe tick borne pathogens in dogs from Palestine including Hepatozoon canis and Babesia species. The prevalence of both H. canis and Babesia species infections in apparently healthy dogs, from ten districts of the West Bank was surveyed. DNA was extracted from blood samples o...

2015
King Shimumbo Nalubamba Ntombi Basimbi Mudenda Mwaka Mwangala Namwila Chilufya Susan Mulenga Eugene Chisela Bwalya Ethel M'kandawire Ngonda Saasa Careen Hankanga Elizabeth Oparaocha Martin Simuunza

A retrospective and prospective analysis of clinical records of dogs diagnosed with Babesia infections was carried out for the years 2000 to 2013 from practices in Lusaka, Zambia. Records of 363 dogs with confirmed Babesia infections were analysed using demographic factors including sex, breed, age, and clinical signs in relation to haematological findings and Babesia species. The clinical and ...

Journal: :Journal of wildlife diseases 2017
Kimberly R McDermid Andrei Snyman Frederick J Verreynne John P Carroll Banie L Penzhorn Michael J Yabsley

African lion ( Panthera leo ) numbers are decreasing rapidly and populations are becoming smaller and more fragmented. Infectious diseases are one of numerous issues threatening free-ranging lion populations, and low-density populations are particularly at risk. We collected data on the prevalence and diversity of viral and parasitic pathogens in a small lion population in eastern Botswana. Dur...

2011
Darren W. Begley Thomas E. Edwards Amy C. Raymond Eric R. Smith Robert C. Hartley Jan Abendroth Banumathi Sankaran Donald D. Lorimer Peter J. Myler Bart L. Staker Lance J. Stewart

Babesiosis is a tick-borne disease caused by eukaryotic Babesia parasites which are morphologically similar to Plasmodium falciparum, the causative agent of malaria in humans. Like Plasmodium, different species of Babesia are tuned to infect different mammalian hosts, including rats, dogs, horses and cattle. Most species of Plasmodium and Babesia possess an essential bifunctional enzyme for nuc...

Journal: :Journal of the South African Veterinary Association 2016
Barend L Penzhorn Ilse Vorster Gernot Redecker Marinda C Oosthuizen

Although there is evidence of high seroprevalence of antibodies to Babesia spp. in dogs in central Namibia, clinical babesiosis is rarely diagnosed. Rhipicephalus sanguineus sensu lato, the vector of Babesia vogeli, is common in Namibia while Haemaphysalis elliptica, the vector of the highly virulent but morphologically indistinguishable Babesia rossi, has rarely been recorded, mainly in northe...

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