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Detections of Rabbit Hemorrhagic Disease Virus 2 (RHDV2) Following the 2020 Outbreak in Wild Lagomorphs across the Western United States. [PDF]
Ringenberg JM +3 more
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European Journal of Wildlife Research, 2014
The progressive decline in the hare population across Europe has been associated with the occurrence of European brown hare syndrome (EBHS), a highly contagious disease considered endemic in all European countries. This study aimed to evaluate the in-field temporal dynamics of European brown hare syndrome virus (EBHSV) infection in wild European brown ...
C. M. Chiari +9 more
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The progressive decline in the hare population across Europe has been associated with the occurrence of European brown hare syndrome (EBHS), a highly contagious disease considered endemic in all European countries. This study aimed to evaluate the in-field temporal dynamics of European brown hare syndrome virus (EBHSV) infection in wild European brown ...
C. M. Chiari +9 more
openaire +3 more sources
European Journal of Wildlife Research, 2008
European Brown Hare Syndrome (EBHS) is a viral pathology described in Sweden in the early 1980s and which has spread to other European countries. Using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay method, we have tested blood samples dried on blotters versus sera to evaluate the utility of this sampling procedure for field research about EBHS. The samples were
Yves Portejoie +5 more
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European Brown Hare Syndrome (EBHS) is a viral pathology described in Sweden in the early 1980s and which has spread to other European countries. Using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay method, we have tested blood samples dried on blotters versus sera to evaluate the utility of this sampling procedure for field research about EBHS. The samples were
Yves Portejoie +5 more
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Veterinary Pathology, 1994
Liver lesions were studied in 40 free-living adult European brown hares ( Lepus europaeus) and varying hares ( Lepus timidus) of both sexes that had died in Sweden with the viral infection European brown hare syndrome (EBHS). The lesions were characterized by their histopathologic, immunohistochemical, and electron microscopic findings.
Dolores Gavier-Widen
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Liver lesions were studied in 40 free-living adult European brown hares ( Lepus europaeus) and varying hares ( Lepus timidus) of both sexes that had died in Sweden with the viral infection European brown hare syndrome (EBHS). The lesions were characterized by their histopathologic, immunohistochemical, and electron microscopic findings.
Dolores Gavier-Widen
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Rabbit Hemorrhagic Disease Virus and European Brown Hare Syndrome Virus (Caliciviridae)
2021Lorenzo Capucci +2 more
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European brown hare syndrome in England
Veterinary Record, 1994The livers from 50 brown hares (Lepus europaeus) were examined by electron microscopy for calicivirus-like particles typical of the virus of European brown hare syndrome (EBHS). The virus was visible in 23 of the livers which included four taken from hares which died in 1982 and 1985 and which had been stored at -20 degrees C.
J P, Duff +3 more
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DESCRIPTIVE EPIZOOTIOLOGICAL STUDY OF EUROPEAN BROWN HARE SYNDROME IN SWEDEN
Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 1993A study on descriptive epizootiology of the viral necrotising hepatitis of hares, European brown hare syndrome (EBHS) was conducted in Sweden. Two thousand eight hundred eighteen hares were necropsied between 1980 and 1989. European brown hare syndrome was diagnosed histologically in 234 (14%) of 1644 European brown hares (Lepus europaeus) and 26 (3 ...
D, Gavier-Widén, T, Mörner
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2008
European brown hare syndrome (EBHS) is a highly contagious, acute disease of the European hare (Lepus europeaus) and mountain hare (Lepus timidus) first described in the early 1980s in Northern Europe (Gavier-Widen and Morner 1991). The aetiology of EBHS remained unclear until it was shown through animal experiments and electron microscopy (EM ...
K. Frölich, A. Lavazza
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European brown hare syndrome (EBHS) is a highly contagious, acute disease of the European hare (Lepus europeaus) and mountain hare (Lepus timidus) first described in the early 1980s in Northern Europe (Gavier-Widen and Morner 1991). The aetiology of EBHS remained unclear until it was shown through animal experiments and electron microscopy (EM ...
K. Frölich, A. Lavazza
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SUSCEPTIBILITY OF HARES AND RABBITS TO A BELGIAN ISOLATE OF EUROPEAN BROWN HARE SYNDROME VIRUS
Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 1993Signs and pathologic changes of European brown hare syndrome (EBHS) were reproduced in four hares (Lepus europaeus) after experimental inoculation of a liver suspension from hares from Belgium, which naturally died of EBHS. Virus particles were demonstrated by electron microscopy in the liver of an experimentally infected hare. They were spherical with
H, Nauwynck +4 more
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