نتایج جستجو برای: Canine Coronavirus

تعداد نتایج: 75542  

2014
Pedro Castanheira Ana Duarte Solange Gil Clara Cartaxeiro Manuel Malta Sara Vieira Luis Tavares

BACKGROUND Infections caused by canine parvovirus, canine distemper virus and canine coronavirus are an important cause of mortality and morbidity in dogs worldwide. Prior to this study, no information was available concerning the incidence and prevalence of these viruses in Cape Verde archipelago. RESULTS To provide information regarding the health status of the canine population in Vila do ...

Journal: :iranian journal of veterinary research 2008
b. mosallanejad m. ghorbanpoor najafabadi r. avizeh

two male dogs at the age of 3 and 5 months of doberman pinscher and german shepherd breeds were referred to the veterinary hospital of ahvaz university with clinical signs of depression, vomiting, haemorrhagic diarrhoea, profound dehydration, fever and anorexia. the affected dogs had not the history of vaccination. concurrent infection of canine parvovirus and coronavirus was detected in dogs b...

2015
Nicola Decaro Viviana Mari Giulia Dowgier Gabriella Elia Gianvito Lanave Maria Loredana Colaianni Canio Buonavoglia

Pantropic canine coronavirus (CCoV) was first detected in young dogs in Italy in 2005, but the complete genome sequence of this virus had not yet been determined. Here, we report the full-length genome sequence of the prototype strain CB/05, which showed that this virus is genetically similar to CCoV-IIa viruses.

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2002
Matthew J Naylor Charanjiv S Walia Steven McOrist Philip R Lehrbach Elizabeth M Deane Gavan A Harrison

Canine coronavirus (CCV) UWSMN-1 was originally identified from an outbreak of fatal gastroenteritis in breeding colonies. In this report, we examined whether UWSMN-1 represents a novel divergent strain or is the result of recombination events between canine and feline coronavirus strains. Sequencing of various regions of the spike and polymerase genes confirms that UWSMN-1 is widely divergent ...

2009
Feng-Shan Gao Gui-Xue Hu Xian-zhu Xia Yu-Wei Gao Ya-Duo Bai Xiao-Huan Zou

Two giant pandas (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) died of unknown causes in a Chinese zoo. The clinical disease profile suggested that the pandas may have suffered a viral infection. Therefore, a series of detection including virus isolation, electron microscopy, cytobiological assay, serum neutralization and RT-PCR were used to identify the virus. It was determined that the isolated virus was a canine...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2006
Akiko Yachi Masami Mochizuki

Specimens obtained from 96 dogs with respiratory and enteric clinical signs in Japan were retrospectively examined for group 2 coronavirus by reverse transcription-PCR. Two dogs were found to be positive. Phylogenetic analysis of the spike gene indicated that they were most probably related to the canine respiratory coronavirus recently described in the United Kingdom.

2011
Sophie Le Poder

A new human coronavirus responsible for severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) was identified in 2003, which raised concern about coronaviruses as agents of serious infectious disease. Nevertheless, coronaviruses have been known for about 50 years to be major agents of respiratory, enteric, or systemic infections of domestic and companion animals. Feline and canine coronaviruses are widesprea...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2001
M J Naylor G A Harrison R P Monckton S McOrist P R Lehrbach E M Deane

A nested PCR (nPCR) assay for the detection of canine coronavirus (CCV) in fecal samples is described. The target sequence for the assay was a 514-bp fragment within the spike (S) glycoprotein gene. The sensitivity of the assay is extremely high, detecting as little as 25 50% tissue culture infective doses per g of unprocessed feces. A clinical trial using dogs challenged orally with CCV SA4 an...

Journal: :The Journal of veterinary medical science 2016
Chunqiu Li Shan Wei Donghua Guo Zhihui Wang Yufei Geng Enyu Wang Xiwen Zhao Mingjun Su Xinyu Wang Dongbo Sun

Canine kobuviruses (CaKVs) are newly recognized picornaviruses that have been recently detected in dogs in the U.S.A., Italy, U.K., the Republic of Korea and Tanzania. To trace the evolution of CaKV strains, a total of 201 fecal samples from rectal swabs of diarrheic dogs, which were obtained from May 2014 to April 2015 in northeast China, were detected by reverse transcription-PCR targeting a ...

Journal: :Veterinary research 2006
Annamaria Pratelli

Since the first identification of the virus in 1971, the disease caused by canine coronavirus (CCoV) has not been adequately investigated and the role that the virus plays in canine enteric illness has still not been well established. In the last decade, as a consequence of the relatively high mutation frequency of RNA positive stranded viruses, CCoV has evolved and a new genotype has been iden...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید