Results 211 to 220 of about 8,664 (238)
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DETECTION PROBABILITY AND PASTEURELLACEAE SURVEILLANCE IN BIGHORN SHEEP
Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 2012We investigated the influence of detection probability (i.e., the probability of detecting the disease or organism of interest) on the repeatability of results reported from bacterial culture tests used to demonstrate the presence of species in the Pasteurellaceae family that infect bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis).
Daniel P, Walsh +3 more
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Phylogeny of the family Pasteurellaceae based on rpoB sequences
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 2004Sequences of the gene encoding theβ-subunit of the RNA polymerase (rpoB) were used to delineate the phylogeny of the familyPasteurellaceae. A total of 72 strains, including the type strains of the major described species as well as selected field isolates, were included in the study.
Korczak, B. +4 more
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Ecology and significance of pasteurellaceae in animals
Zentralblatt für Bakteriologie, 1993The reservoir of eighty-one taxa/groups classified with the family Pasteurellaceae Pohl 1981 is reviewed based upon published data and own investigations. With the exception of certain strains of P. multocida, A. pleuropneumoniae and [H.] paragallinarum organisms belonging to this family are usually regarded as opportunistic, secondary invaders which ...
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Identification of animal Pasteurellaceae by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry
Journal of Microbiological Methods, 2012Species of the family Pasteurellaceae play an important role as primary or opportunistic animal pathogens. In veterinary diagnostic laboratories identification of this group of bacteria is mainly done by phenotypic assays while genetic identification based on housekeeping genes is mostly used for research and particularly important diagnostic samples ...
Kuhnert, Peter +5 more
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Characterization of some previously unclassified Pasteurellaceae isolated from hamsters
Journal of Applied Bacteriology, 1989Bacteria isolated from purulent processes on the jaws of European hamsters ( Cricetus cricetus ) and from intestinal inflammatory processes in Syrian hamsters ( Mesocricetus auratus ), bred as laboratory animals have been shown to be phenotypically ...
T, Krause, I, Kunstýr, R, Mutters
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Ecology and significance of pasteurellaceae in man — an update
Zentralblatt für Bakteriologie, 1993Within the last decade new knowledge has emerged concerning the significance of Pasteurellaceae in man; the classification has undergone some changes, and new taxa were described. Haemophilus influenzae serotype b was shown to have a clonal distribution that is related to demographic patterns of the human host.
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Revised taxonomy and nomenclature of rodent Pasteurellaceae: Implications for monitoring
Laboratory Animals, 2018Pasteurellosis is a well-recognized disease with similar pathology in all laboratory rodent species. Pasteurella pneumotropica is the most frequently mentioned member of the Pasteurellaceae isolated from mice and rats. Numerous other Pasteurellaceae taxa have been obtained from mice, rats, and other rodent species.
R Boot, W Nicklas, H Christensen
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VACCINE AGAINST PASTEURELLACEAE
2012The invention relates to vaccines providing protection against infections caused by members of the Pasteurellaceae family comprising outer membrane vesicles as the only active components, wherein the outer membrane vesicles are obtained from one or more strains of the Pasteurellaceae family, with the proviso that hypervesiculating strains are excluded.
UNIV GRAZ +3 more
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Identification of Animal Pasteurellaceae by MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrometry
2014Species of the family Pasteurellaceae play an important role as primary or opportunistic, predominantly respiratory, pathogens in domestic and wild animals. Some of them cause severe disease with high economic losses in commercial animal husbandry. Hence, rapid and accurate differentiation of Pasteurellaceae is important and signifies a particular ...
Joachim, Frey, Peter, Kuhnert
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Our understanding of the Pasteurellaceae.
Canadian journal of veterinary research = Revue canadienne de recherche veterinaire, 1990With the exception of a few consistent pathogens--Pasteurella multocida strains of bovine hemorrhagic septicemia and fowl cholera, Actinobacillus (Haemophilus) pleuropneumoniae, Haemophilus aegyptius and Haemophilus paragallinarum--members of the family Pasteurellaceae are commensal parasites on mucous membranes of vertebrate animals.
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