نتایج جستجو برای: بابزیوز babesiosis

تعداد نتایج: 1138  

Journal: :Journal of the Japan Veterinary Medical Association 2015

Journal: :Journal of the South African Veterinary Association 2000
A J Möhr R G Lobetti J J van der Lugt

This retrospective study describes 4 cases of canine babesiosis with histologically confirmed acute pancreatitis. In addition, 16 dogs with babesiosis are reported with serum amylase (>3500 U/l) and/or lipase (>650 U/l) activity elevations of a magnitude that would support a diagnosis of probable acute pancreatitis, although extra-pancreatic sources of the enzymes could not be excluded in these...

Journal: :Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe K, Kleintiere/Heimtiere 2012
G Kirtz M Leschnik E Hooijberg A Tichy E Leidinger

OBJECTIVE Haematological changes in dogs and climatic conditions favourable for the vector may assist in the quick in-house diagnosis of canine babesiosis. MATERIAL AND METHODS Blood samples from 358 dogs suspected to have canine babesiosis were evaluated. The diagnosis was confirmed in 113 dogs by detection of Babesia canis by microscopic examination of a stained blood smear using the concen...

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 ...

2016
Simona Gabrielli Valentina Totino Fabio Macchioni Freddy Zuñiga Patricia Rojas Yuni Lara Mimmo Roselli Alessandro Bartoloni Gabriella Cancrini

To investigate human babesiosis in the Bolivian Chaco, in 2013 we tested blood samples from 271 healthy persons living in 2 rural communities in this region. Microscopy and PCR indicated that 3.3% of persons were positive for Babesia microti parasites (US lineage); seroprevalence was 45.7%. Appropriate screening should mitigate the risk for transfusion-associated babesiosis.

2010
Karita Haapasalo Pekka Suomalainen Antti Sukura Heli Siikamäki T. Sakari Jokiranta

We report an unusual case of human babesiosis in Finland in a 53-year-old man with no history of splenectomy. He had a rudimentary spleen, coexisting Lyme borreliosis, exceptional dark streaks on his extremities, and subsequent disseminated aspergillosis. He was infected with Babesia divergens, which usually causes bovine babesiosis in Finland.

Journal: :Anaesthesia 2012
P Sultan C Green E Riley B Carvalho

We present a case of a parturient with babesiosis and Lyme disease who was scheduled for elective caesarean section. The caesarean section was performed under spinal anaesthesia, and the patient had a coronary artery dissection 4 days postoperatively. Neuraxial anaesthesia and possible mechanisms for the coronary artery dissection in a patient with babesiosis and Lyme disease are discussed.

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2009
Sonia Sethi David Alcid Hemant Kesarwala Robert W. Tolan

Only 2 neonates with transplacentally or perinatally acquired (congenital) babesiosis have been reported. We describe a probable third congenital case of babesiosis in a 26-day-old infant; transmission was determined on the basis of a blood smear from the infant (15% parasitemia) and serologic results from the infant and mother.

2012
Julie T. Joseph Kerry Purtill Susan J. Wong Jose Munoz Allen Teal Susan Madison-Antenucci Harold W. Horowitz Maria E. Aguero-Rosenfeld Julie M. Moore Carlos Abramowsky Gary P. Wormser

Babesiosis is usually acquired from a tick bite or through a blood transfusion. We report a case of babesiosis in an infant for whom vertical transmission was suggested by evidence of Babesia spp. antibodies in the heel-stick blood sample and confirmed by detection of Babesia spp. DNA in placenta tissue.

Journal: :JAMA 1996
P J Krause S R Telford A Spielman V Sikand R Ryan D Christianson G Burke P Brassard R Pollack J Peck D H Persing

OBJECTIVE To determine whether patients coinfected with Lyme disease and babesiosis in sites where both diseases are zoonotic experience a greater number of symptoms for a longer period of time than those with either infection alone. DESIGN Community-based, yearly serosurvey and clinic-based cohort study. SETTING Island community in Rhode Island and 2 Connecticut medical clinics from 1990 t...

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