when considered in connection with the known date of abortion, indicated a long persistence of the disease in a large proportion of the cases, and this was confirmed by repeated serum tests in several of the infected cows during their subsequent isolation.5.In fourteen cows out of a total of...
In the 43 years since the first description in California, epizootic bovine abortion (EBA) has been considered but not definitively diagnosed as a cause of late-term abortions on Nevada ranches. Examination of aborted full-term bovine fetuses obtained from Nevada ranches revealed gross abnormalities...
An Outbreak of Epizootic Abortion in Cattledoi:10.1016/S2543-3377(17)34802-1SDOSVeterinary Journal & Annals of Comparative Pathology
Assessment of Role of Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease Virus in Abortion in Cattle and Small Ruminants in TürkiyeEVK, MuratResearch & Practice in Veterinary & Animal Science (REPVAS)
Lumpy skin disease of cattle: an emerging problem in the Sultanate of Oman Lumpy skin disease (LSD) is a highly infectious disease of cattle caused by a virus belonging to the Capripoxvirus genus of the family Poxviridae. The purp... MH Tageldin,DB Wallace,GH Gerdes,... - 《Tropical An...
Epizootic bovine abortion (EBA) has caused economic loss in beef cattle in California and other western states for more than fifty years. Due to the inability to propagate the agent in vitro, the etiology of EBA remained unknown. Suppression-hybridization polymerase chain reaction (shPCR) ...
An Outbreak of Epizootic Abortion in Cattle *Veterinary-Surgeon DesmondThe Veterinary Journal and Annals of Comparative Pathology
Epizootic bovine abortion (EBA) is an arthropod-borne bacterial disease that causes significant economic loss for cattle producers in the western United States. The etiologic agent,Pajaroellobacter abortibovis, is an intracellular pathogen that has yet to be cultivated in vitro, thereby requiring nove...
(blood, saliva, and/or nasal discharges) or infected tissues of animals or aborted ruminant fetuses. Aerosols of infected blood generated during ruminant abortion or animal slaughter can also be a source of virus transmission to humans [2,3]. This virus can also be transmitted to vertebrate ...