Results 101 to 110 of about 865 (140)
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New Zealand Veterinary Journal, 1987
Abstract Extract Madam: — In June 1986, I was called to a piggery in the West Auckland area. The piggery consists of a breeding and fattening unit. Piglets from two hundred sows are taken through to pork and bacon weight. All pigs are meal fed. The dry sows and farrowing unit are separated within the same building.
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Abstract Extract Madam: — In June 1986, I was called to a piggery in the West Auckland area. The piggery consists of a breeding and fattening unit. Piglets from two hundred sows are taken through to pork and bacon weight. All pigs are meal fed. The dry sows and farrowing unit are separated within the same building.
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2017
Aujeszky’s disease (AD) or pseudorabies (PR), also referred as “mad itch,” is a highly contagious, economically significant disease of pigs caused by suid herpesvirus 1 (SHV-1). ADV can infect a wide range of mammals and birds, but it is considered as non-pathogenic for human.
Ewelina Czyżewska Dors +1 more
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Aujeszky’s disease (AD) or pseudorabies (PR), also referred as “mad itch,” is a highly contagious, economically significant disease of pigs caused by suid herpesvirus 1 (SHV-1). ADV can infect a wide range of mammals and birds, but it is considered as non-pathogenic for human.
Ewelina Czyżewska Dors +1 more
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Aujeszky's disease in captive bears
Veterinary Record, 1999Five of eight bears died during an outbreak of Aujeszky's disease in a travelling circus in the north of Spain. The bears had been fed on a diet which indcluded raw pigs' heads. One of three Himalayan bears and a Kodiak bear died acutely with signs of the disease. One of four polar bears died acutely without signs, another died with signs of Aujeszky's
M, Banks +3 more
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Eradication of Aujeszky's Disease in Germany
Journal of Veterinary Medicine, Series B, 2003SummaryAujeszky's disease (AD) manifested itself in both German states in 1960. Owing to the historical development, in the subsequent two decades, the development of the disease and of its control in the Western and Eastern parts of Germany went different ways.
T, Müller +4 more
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Aujeszky's disease and the European Community
Veterinary Microbiology, 1997The situation as regards AD in the European Union in August 1995 is described. The territory has been divided into three zones comprising free regions, regions where eradication programmes are in operation and the remainder. The criteria used for defining these areas are described as are the movement rules applicable to movement into each zone ...
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Immunobiology of pseudorabies (Aujeszky's Disease)
Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, 1996Aujeszky's Disease (AD), a serious illness of pigs causing significant economic losses in the pig industry, is caused by Pseudorabies Virus (PrV). PrV belongs to the alphaherpesvirus subfamily of the herpesviruses with a double-stranded DNA genome in an enveloped capsid capable of encoding approximately 70 proteins.
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Experimental Aujeszky’s Disease (Pseudorabies) in Rats
British Veterinary Journal, 1970SUMMARY Aujeszky’s disease virus was titrated in both laboratory and wild rats. Both groups were susceptible to virus, but were at least a thousand-fold more resistant than sheep or rabbits. Virus distribution in the rats, however, was more like the distribution in pigs than in ruminants and carnivores.
J B, McFerran, C, Dow
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Immunoperoxidase study of Aujeszky’s disease in pigs
Research in Veterinary Science, 1982Viral antigen was detected by an immunoperoxidase technique in histological sections from pigs with Aujeszky's disease. The antigen was found mainly in association with focal necrosis in the cerebellum, tonsils, oral and nasal mucosa, salivary glands, lungs, liver, kidneys, pancreas, spleen and adrenal glands.
R, Ducatelle, W, Coussement, J, Hoorens
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