Results 241 to 250 of about 17,402 (274)
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Caprine Bluetongue Virus Isolations
American Journal of Veterinary Research, 1980SUMMARY Viral isolation procedures demonstrated the presence of bluetongue virus serotypes 10, 11, and 17 in routine caprine accessions. The goats in this report showed one or more of the following signs or lesions: weakness, pulmonary disease, abortion, fetuses with developmental abnormalities, kerato-conjunctivitis, anemia, and swollen joints.
M, Inverso, G N, Lukas, S J, Weidenbach
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Bluetongue Virus in Pronghorn Antelope
American Journal of Veterinary Research, 1972SUMMARY Four adult pronghorn antelope (Antilocapra americana) were inoculated subcutaneously with bluetongue virus (btv) strain BT-8. Two antelope which did not possess preinoculation btv neutralizing antibodies developed clinical signs of bluetongue (bt) and died 7 and 8 days after inoculation. A low-level viremia persisted in each antelope for 3 days
G L, Hoff, D O, Trainer
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Bluetongue Virus Assembly and Morphogenesis
2006Like other members of the Reoviridae, bluetongue virus faces the same constraints on structure and assembly that are imposed by a large dsRNA genome. However, since it is arthropod-transmitted, BTV must have assembly pathways that are sufficiently flexible to allow it to replicate in evolutionarily distant hosts.
Rob Noad, Polly Roy
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Bluetongue Virus in Exotic Ruminants
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1973SUMMARY An epizootic of a hemorrhagic disease occurred in 6 species of exotic ruminants at the San Diego Zoo and San Diego Wild Animal Park in 1970 and 1971. The disease was reproduced in deer by inoculation of pericardial and pleural fluids from a muntjac (Muntiacus reeuesi) and the spleen of a kudu (Tragelaphus capensis). The agent was also recovered
G L, Hoff, L A, Griner, D O, Trainer
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Purification and characterization of bluetongue virus
Virology, 1969Abstract Purified bluetongue virus was shown to possess a double-stranded RNA genome, very similar to that of reovirus, consisting of at least three double-stranded components. A low molecular weight component probably equivalent to the adenine-rich single strand found in reovirus was present in varying amounts.
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Bluetongue virus in the French Island of Reunion
Veterinary Microbiology, 2005This paper records the results of a bluetongue virus (BTV) serological survey and reports the first isolation of BTV on the French Island of Reunion. In January 2003, the French Island of Reunion, located off the coast of Madagascar, reported an outbreak of disease in cattle that resembled clinical bluetongue (BT) in sheep.
Breard, Emmanuel +3 more
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First evidence of bluetongue virus in Kazakhstan
Veterinary Microbiology, 2003We report the results of the first serological survey for bluetongue virus in Kazakhstan. We analysed blood samples collected from 958 livestock and 513 wild saiga antelopes over a large area of the country, and found 23.2% seroprevalence in livestock and 0% in saigas.
E. J. Milner-Gulland +3 more
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Bluetongue virus surveillance study
Veterinary Record, 2021Christina Papadopoulou +2 more
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BLUETONGUE VIRUS INFECTION IN AUSTRALIA
Australian Veterinary Journal, 1978W. A. Snowdon, R. W. Gee
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