نتایج جستجو برای: mycobacterium bovis

تعداد نتایج: 48374  

A. Ch. De la Mora A. De la Mora Valle A. Rodríguez Gardea G. E. Medina-Basulto, G. Lopez-Valencia J. C. Herrera Ramírez J. L. Rodríguez Castillo R. M. B. Hurtado S. D. Gómez Gómez T. B. Rentería Evangelista

Bovine tuberculosis (TBB) is a zoonotic disease distributed worldwide and is of great importance for public health and the livestock industry. Several experimental vaccines against this disease have been evaluated in recent years, yielding varying results. An example is the Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine, which has been used extensively in humans and tested in cattle showing mixed resul...

2008

In view of the considerable and continuing public health significance of Mycobacterium bovis infection in humans and animals, WHO convened a meeting on zoonotic tuberculosis in Geneva in November 1993. The participants at the meeting reviewed the human and animal tuberculosis situation worldwide, discussed the zoonotic aspects of M. bovis infection in United Republic of Tanzania and Zambia, exc...

2013
Gambo Aliyu Samer S. El-Kamary Alash'le Abimiku Nicholas Ezati Iwakun Mosunmola Laura Hungerford Clayton Brown Kathleen J. Tracy Joshua Obasanya William Blattner

Objective. Data on pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) complex in Nigeria are limited. We investigated species of MTB complex in TB cases from northern Nigeria. Methods. New TB suspects were enrolled, screened for HIV and their sputum samples were cultured after routine microscopy. Genotypes MTBC and MTBDRplus were used to characterize the MTB complex species ...

2015
Hayley C. King Andrew Murphy Phillip James Emma Travis David Porter Jason Sawyer Jennifer Cork Richard J. Delahay Elizabeth M. Wellington

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2000
J Keane H G Remold H Kornfeld

Human alveolar macrophages (AMphi) undergo apoptosis following infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis in vitro. Apoptosis of cells infected with intracellular pathogens may benefit the host by eliminating a supportive environment for bacterial growth. The present study compared AMphi apoptosis following infection by M. tuberculosis complex strains of differing virulence and by Mycobacterium ...

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2008
Timothy C. Rodwell Marisa Moore Kathleen S. Moser Stephanie K. Brodine Steffanie A. Strathdee

The epidemiology of tuberculosis (TB) in the United States is changing as the incidence of disease becomes more concentrated in foreign-born persons. Mycobacterium bovis appears to be contributing substantially to the TB incidence in some binational communities with ties to Mexico. We conducted a retrospective analysis of TB case surveillance data from the San Diego, California, region from 199...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2014
Jodi L McGill Randy E Sacco Cynthia L Baldwin Janice C Telfer Mitchell V Palmer W Ray Waters

Promoting effective immunity to Mycobacterium bovis infection is a challenge that is of interest to the fields of human and animal medicine alike. We report that γδ T cells from virulent M. bovis-infected cattle respond specifically and directly to complex, protein, and nonprotein mycobacterial Ags. Importantly, to our knowledge, we demonstrate for the first time that bovine γδ T cells specific...

Journal: :Clinical and diagnostic laboratory immunology 1994
C Coetsier M C Baelden M Coene C Cocito

The antigen complex of A60 of Mycobacterium bovis BCG was analyzed by different immunological techniques to assess its relevance to tuberculosis and the involvement of its components in the immune reactions elicited in humans by tuberculous infection. A60 is composed of about 30 components, of which 8 were identified by available monoclonal antibodies (lipoarabinomannan, a glycolipid, and prote...

Journal: :The Journal of animal ecology 2009
Rosie Woodroffe Christl A Donnelly Gao Wei D R Cox F John Bourne Terry Burke Roger K Butlin C L Cheeseman George Gettinby Peter Gilks Simon Hedges Helen E Jenkins W Thomas Johnston John P McInerney W Ivan Morrison Lisa C Pope

1. In most social animals, the prevalence of directly transmitted pathogens increases in larger groups and at higher population densities. Such patterns are predicted by models of Mycobacterium bovis infection in European badgers (Meles meles). 2. We investigated the relationship between badger abundance and M. bovis prevalence, using data on 2696 adult badgers in 10 populations sampled at the ...

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