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Ehrlichia ruminantium: genomic and evolutionary features [PDF]
Ehrlichia ruminantium is the causative agent of heartwater, an important tick-borne disease of livestock in Africa and the Caribbean that threatens the American mainland. The genome sequences of three strains of E. ruminantium have recently been published, revealing the presence of specific features related to genomic plasticity. E. ruminantium strains
Frutos, Roger +4 more
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Zentralblatt für Veterinärmedizin Reihe B, 2010
Summary The pathological anatomical findings are described in 10 dogs experimentally infected with Ehrlichia canis. The brains were characterized by endothelial, perivascular and glial proliferations, lymphoplasmacellular meningo-panencephalitis and chorioiditis.
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Summary The pathological anatomical findings are described in 10 dogs experimentally infected with Ehrlichia canis. The brains were characterized by endothelial, perivascular and glial proliferations, lymphoplasmacellular meningo-panencephalitis and chorioiditis.
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Persistent Infection with Ehrlichia chaffeensis
Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1993Although persistent infection of animals by members of the genus Ehrlichia is well known and may be associated with subsequent severe or fatal illness, persistent infection of humans with Ehrlichia chaffeensis has not been reported. Herein we report a typical case of serologically documented acute ehrlichiosis; despite therapy with tetracycline and ...
J S, Dumler, W L, Sutker, D H, Walker
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A New Strain of Ehrlichia canis
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1971SUMMARY A new strain of Ehrlichia canis was isolated from a dog in Arkansas. It differed from earlier isolants in that it was only mildly pathogenic, and was found principally in circulating neutrophils and eosinophils rather than in lymphocytes and monocytes.
S A, Ewing +3 more
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Prevalence of Ehrlichia chaffeensis and Ehrlichia ewingii in Ticks from Tennessee
Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases, 2010Human ehrlichiosis is the second most common tick-borne disease reported in Tennessee after Rocky Mountain spotted fever. Two closely related ehrlichiae, Ehrlichia chaffeensis and Ehrlichia ewingii, are both causative agents of human disease and are transmitted by Amblyomma americanum, the lone star tick.
Sara B, Cohen +8 more
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1991
J S, Dumler, D H, Walker
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J S, Dumler, D H, Walker
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2018
Cytoecetes ondiri, an African relative of Ehrlichia phagocytophila, was shown to cross-react in immunoblots with E. equi and in IFAT with E. phagocytophila antigens thus confirming a close antigenic relationship.
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Cytoecetes ondiri, an African relative of Ehrlichia phagocytophila, was shown to cross-react in immunoblots with E. equi and in IFAT with E. phagocytophila antigens thus confirming a close antigenic relationship.
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