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Observations on transplacental infection with bluetongue virus in sheep.
1985
Richardson C. | Taylor W.P. | Terlecki S. | Gibbs E.P.J.
Immunologic response of sheep to inactivated and virulent bluetongue virus.
1985
Stott J.L. | Barber T.L. | Osburn B.I.
Humoral immune response of calves to bluetongue virus infection.
1987
MacLachlan N.J. | Heidner H.W. | Fuller F.J.
Detection of viral antigens in bluetongue virus-infected ovine tissues, using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique.
1985
Cherrington J.M. | Ghalib H.W. | Sawyer M.M. | Osburn B.I.
Prevalence of serotype specific antibody to equine encephalosis virus in Thoroughbred yearlings in South Africa (1999-2004)
2008
Howell, P.G.(University of Pretoria Faculty of Veterinary Science Equine Research Centre) | Nurton, Jane P.(University of Pretoria Faculty of Veterinary Science Equine Research Centre) | Nel, Daleen(University of Pretoria Faculty of Veterinary Science Equine Research Centre) | Lourens, Carina W.(University of Pretoria Faculty of Veterinary Science Equine Research Centre) | Guthrie, A.J.(University of Pretoria Faculty of Veterinary Science Equine Research Centre)
Cohorts of yearlings were sampled over a period of 6 years in a retrospective serological survey to establish the annual prevalence of serotype specific antibody to equine encephalosis virus on Thoroughbred stud farms distributed within defined geographical regions of South Africa. Seasonal seroprevalence varied between 3.6 % and 34.7 %, revealing both single and multiple serotype infections in an individual yearling. During the course of this study serotypes 1 and 6 were most frequently and extensively identified while the remaining serotypes 2, 3, 4, 5 and 7 were all identified as sporadic and localized infections affecting only individual horses. This study of the seasonal prevalence of equine encephalosis virus has a corollary and serves as a useful model in the seasonal incidence of the serotypes of African horse sickness and bluetongue in regions where the respective diseases are endemic.
Show more [+] Less [-]Isolation and characterization of epizootic hemorrhagic disease virus from sheep and cattle in Colorado
1988
Thompson, L.H. | Mecham, J.O. | Holbrook, F.R.
Epizootic hemorrhagic disease virus was isolated from cattle and sheep in northeastern Colorado during July and August 1984. The isolates were identified as serotype 2 by plaque-inhibition serotyping, genome electropherotyping, and protein analysis.
Show more [+] Less [-]Bluetongue virus infection in pregnant ewes
1994
Parsonson, I.M. | Luedke, A.J. | Barber, T.L. | Walton, T.E.
Inoculation of 53 ewes after 35, 45, 60, or 80 days of gestation with bluetongue virus serotypes 10, 11, 13, or 17, or with epizootic hemorrhagic disease virus serotypes 1 or 2, resulted in overt clinical disease in the 47 ewes inoculated with bluetongue virus but not in the 6 ewes inoculated with epizootic hemorrhagic disease virus. None of the lambs produced by these ewes had developmental defects or any evidence of persistence of viremia.
Show more [+] Less [-]Prevalence of bovine herpesvirus-1, parainfluenza-3, bovine rotavirus, bovine viral diarrhea, bovine adenovirus-7, bovine leukemia virus and bluetongue virus antibodies in cattle in Mexico
1983
Suzan, V.M. | Aguilar, R.E. (Direccion General de Sanidad Animal, Piso (Mexico)) | Onuma, M. | Murakami, Y.
The classification of seven serotypes of equine encephalosis virus and the prevalence of homologous antibody in horses in South Africa
2002
Howell, P.G. (Pretoria Univ., Onderstepoort (South Africa). Equine Research Centre) | Groenewald, D. | Visage, C.W. | Bosman, A.-M. | Coetzer, J.A.W. | Guthrie, A.J.
Detection of bluetongue virus and African horsesickness virus in co-infected cell cultures with NS1 gene probes
1995
Venter, E.H. (Pretoria Univ., Onderstepoort (South Africa). Dept. of Veterinary and Tropical Diseases) | Huismans, H. | Van Dijk, A.A.