Results 121 to 130 of about 5,863 (153)
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Structural proteins of swine vesicular disease virus

Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1975
The physical and chemical properties of foot-and-mouth disease and swine vesicular disease viruses have been compared, and it is concluded that these viruses are structurally different. The purified S.V.D. and F.M.D. viruses were disrupted and analysed in polyacrylamide gels.
J F, Delagneau, S, Bernard, G, Lenoir
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Pathogenesis of Swine Vesicular Disease in Pigs

American Journal of Veterinary Research, 1979
SUMMARY Pigs exposed to swine vesicular disease virus developed vesicular lesions by postinoculation day 2. Lesions first appeared on the coronary band and then on the dewclaw, tongue, snout, lips, and bulbs of the heels. The onset of viremia coincided with febrile response and the appearance of vesicles.
S S, Lai   +3 more
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Swine Vesicular Disease — Studies in Pregnant Sows

Zentralblatt für Veterinärmedizin Reihe B, 1977
SummaryTwelve sows infected with swine vesicular disease virus by intradermal or intravenous inoculation showed no signs of general ill health, although large amounts of virus were recovered from excretions and secretions for several days. No abortions resulted and no evidence of transplacental spread of virus to the foetus was obtained when the sows ...
R, Burrows   +4 more
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Chemical Inactivation of Swine Vesicular Disease Virus

British Veterinary Journal, 1975
SUMMARY The effects of diverse chemical formulations and disinfectants at known concentrations were observed for their virucidal activity against the Hong Kong strain of swine vesicular disease virus. During an exposure period of up to 30 min at 25°C, only 5 of the 13 compounds tested completely inactivated the virus.
J H, Blackwell   +2 more
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Reappearance of swine vesicular disease virus in Portugal

Veterinary Record, 2007
SIR, — We report here the genetic typing of a virus from the first occurrence of swine vesicular disease (svd) in Portugal since 2004. This outbreak was reported to the World Organisation for Animal Health (oie) on June 27, 2007, by the Portuguese Ministry of Agriculture and involved a farm ...
N J, Knowles   +7 more
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Infection of man by swine vesicular disease virus

Journal of Comparative Pathology, 1976
Abstract Swine vesicular disease is closely related serologically to Coxsackie B5 virus but the two viruses can be differentiated by neutralization and immunodiffusion tests. Using these tests, it was shown that the Coxsackie-like illnesses of four of the personnel at this Institute engaged on experiments with swine vesicular disease were caused by ...
F, Brown, D, Goodridge, R, Burrows
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Neuropathology of experimental swine vesicular disease in pigs

Research in Veterinary Science, 1976
A total of 26 young pigs were inoculated intracerebrally, intravenously or intradermally with the UKG27/72 strain of SVD virus, grown in tissue culture, and killed two, four, eight or 16 days after exposure. Overt nervous symptoms were seen only in pigs inoculated intracerebrally, but all pigs of all groups showed a non-suppurative meningitis and ...
C, Lenghaus   +3 more
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Foot-And-Mouth Disease, Vesicular Stomatitis, Newcastle Disease, And Swine Vesicular Disease

1998
Abstract Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is still of major economic importance in many parts of the world, despite its successful control, and indeed eradication, in many others. Although the virus (FMDV) can infect a wide range of hooved animals, it is primarily in cattle and pigs that severe problems ensue.
P lvlorgan-Capner, A S Bryden
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Foot-and-mouth disease, Vesicular stomatitis, Newcastle disease, and Swine vesicular disease

2011
In this chapter we review four viral zoonoses that are an important cause of a vesicular disease in animals, but only occasionally cause human infections. These viruses represent three different taxonomical families (Picornaviridae, Rhabdoviridae, Paramyxoviridae).
Satu Kurkela, David W. G. Brown
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[Swine vesicular disease: pathological study (author's transl)].

Annales de recherches veterinaires. Annals of veterinary research, 1975
Seventy-eight pigs inoculated with swine vesicular disease virus are autopsied at reaction times staged from day I to day 44. Two viral strains of different pathogenicity are studied. Non pathognomonic histological lesions of this disease are identical to those observed in foot and mouth disease. This confirms the relationship of the two viruses.
M, Lahellec, J M, Gourreau
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