نتایج جستجو برای: pathogenic viruses

تعداد نتایج: 160515  

Journal: :Revue scientifique et technique 2000
D E Swayne D L Suarez

Highly pathogenic (HP) avian influenza (AI) (HPAI) is an extremely contagious, multi-organ systemic disease of poultry leading to high mortality, and caused by some H5 and H7 subtypes of type A influenza virus, family Orthomyxoviridae. However, most AI virus strains are mildly pathogenic (MP) and produce either subclinical infections or respiratory and/or reproductive diseases in a variety of d...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2005
D J Hulse-Post K M Sturm-Ramirez J Humberd P Seiler E A Govorkova S Krauss C Scholtissek P Puthavathana C Buranathai T D Nguyen H T Long T S P Naipospos H Chen T M Ellis Y Guan J S M Peiris R G Webster

Wild waterfowl, including ducks, are natural hosts of influenza A viruses. These viruses rarely caused disease in ducks until 2002, when some H5N1 strains became highly pathogenic. Here we show that these H5N1 viruses are reverting to nonpathogenicity in ducks. Ducks experimentally infected with viruses isolated between 2003 and 2004 shed virus for an extended time (up to 17 days), during which...

Journal: :Asian Journal of Animal and Veterinary Advances 2011

2017
Hongbo Guo Erik de Vries Ryan McBride Jojanneke Dekkers Wenjie Peng Kim M. Bouwman Corwin Nycholat M. Helene Verheije James C. Paulson Frank J.M. van Kuppeveld Cornelis A.M. de Haan

Emergence and intercontinental spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza A(H5Nx) virus clade 2.3.4.4 is unprecedented. H5N8 and H5N2 viruses have caused major economic losses in the poultry industry in Europe and North America, and lethal human infections with H5N6 virus have occurred in Asia. Knowledge of the evolution of receptor-binding specificity of these viruses, which might affect host...

Journal: :The Journal of general virology 2002
Laura Campitelli Concetta Fabiani Simona Puzelli Alessandro Fioretti Emanuela Foni Alessandra De Marco Scott Krauss Robert G Webster Isabella Donatelli

In Italy, multiple H3N2 influenza viruses were isolated from chickens with mild respiratory disease and were shown to replicate in the respiratory tracts of experimentally infected chickens; this finding is the first to show that H3N2 influenza viruses can replicate and cause disease in chickens. H3N2 influenza viruses in pigs on nearby farms seemed a likely source of the virus; however, antige...

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