Results 151 to 160 of about 8,582 (206)
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Disease facts - Swine dysentery

Livestock, 2009
Affected individuals are usually pyrexic, depressed and inappetant, with withdrawn flanks (Fig. 3), often with foul smelling bloody mucoid faeces running down the perineum. Untreated it can kill or alternatively leave a chronically affected individual that fails to thrive, ultimately requiring euthanasia.
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Passive protection of segmented swine colonic loops against swine dysentery

American Journal of Veterinary Research, 1985
SUMMARY Swine-ligated loops were used to demonstrate passive protection against swine dysentery. Loops inoculated with immune sera containing complement and with homologous Treponema hyodysenteriae were normal at necropsy. Loops inoculated with heat-inactivated immune sera and heterologous T hyodysenteriae were not protected. Loops inoculated with heat-
L A, Joens   +5 more
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Swine Dysentery.

Veterinary pathology, 2017
Swine dysentery is a severe enteric disease in pigs, which is characterized by bloody to mucoid diarrhea and associated with reduced growth performance and variable mortality. This disease is most often observed in grower-finisher pigs, wherein susceptible pigs develop a significant mucohemorrhagic typhlocolitis following infection with strongly ...
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Scanning Electron Microscopic Observations on Swine Dysentery

Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1973
SUMMARY Specimens of colonic mucosa from 3 pigs with artificially induced dysentery were examined by scanning electron microscopy. Specimens from the pig killed at 3 days postinoculation (pi) were essentially normal. In specimens from the pigs killed at 5 and 8 days pi, mucohemorrhagic colitis was evident and spirochetes morphologically compatible with
G A, Kennedy   +2 more
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Immunity to Swine Dysentery in Recovered Pigs

American Journal of Veterinary Research, 1979
SUMMARY The immune status of 29 pigs recovered from swine dysentery (sd) was evaluated after reexposure to Treponema hyodysenteriae. Pigs which had recovered from sd and remained asymptomatic for 4 to 6, 9 to 13, and 16 to 17 weeks after initial inoculation were reexposed to 1.5 X 109 viable cells of T hyodysenteriae per pig.
L A, Joens, D L, Harris, D H, Baum
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Swine Dysentery

New Zealand Veterinary Journal, 1975
H G, Pearce, C, Smith
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Swine Dysentery

Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1972
D L, Harris, R D, Glock
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[Swine dysentery].

Veterinariia, 1976
P I, Pritulin, D V, Lobuntsova
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Comments on Swine Dysentery

Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1972
H J, Kurtz, D K, Sorensen
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