Results 51 to 60 of about 4,276 (150)
THE OCCURRENCE OF GLANDERS IN MAN. [PDF]
CLINICAL REPORT BY DR. BEVAN. During October, 1907, I was called to Milwaukee to see three cases which had puzzled the attending physicians and which presented interesting and difficult problems. There were three brothers, farmers, who lived near each other in central Wisconsin, and the son of one of the men involved in the case.
openaire +2 more sources
Analysed are the methodological approaches used for identification and typing of B. mallei and B. pseudomallei. Suggested are recommendations for improvements of algorithms of laboratory diagnosis of glanders and melioidosis including wide range of ...
V. A. Antonov +13 more
doaj +1 more source
The aim of the study was to determine the phylogeographic and phenotypic characteristics of the Burkholderia mallei that caused an outbreak of equine glanders in the Trans-Baikal Territory in 2023. Materials and methods. The B.
I. B. Zakharova +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Bioterrorism, Glanders and melioidosis
We note with interest the recently published guidelines for management of melioidosis and glanders. We are clinicians with extensive experience with melioidosis in Australia and Thailand and would like to express our concern at a number of inaccuracies in these guidelines.
A C, Cheng, D Ab, Dance, B J, Currie
openaire +2 more sources
Experimental Study on Chemotherapy of Acute Glanders
Glanders is a zoonotic infection inducing acute forms of the disease (pneumonia, sepsis) in humans and animals under certain conditions, which even with the use of modern chemotherapy have unfavourable prognosis.
V. I. Ilyukhin +9 more
doaj
Improvement of the MLVA typing scheme for Burkholderia mallei strains
Introduction. The registration of sporadic cases of glanders in horses in Russia, caused by Burkholderia mallei, highlights the importance of developing genotyping algorithms for this pathogen. The MLVA method (multilocus-variable tandem repeat analysis),
Margarita L. Ledenyova +4 more
doaj +1 more source
Among the known species of Burkholderia only two are obligate pathogens, i. e. B.mallei and B.pseudomallei, causative agents of glanders and melioidosis respectively.
V. I. Ilyukhin +5 more
doaj

