نتایج جستجو برای: footrot (plants)

تعداد نتایج: 198202  

2011
Ulrika König Ann-Kristin J Nyman Kerstin de Verdier

BACKGROUND Footrot is a world-wide contagious disease in sheep and goats. It is an infection of the epidermis of the interdigital skin, and the germinal layers of the horn tissue of the feet. The first case of footrot in Swedish sheep was diagnosed in 2004. Due to difficulties in distinguishing benign footrot from early cases of virulent footrot and because there is no possibility for virulence...

2014
Rebecca Davenport Christopher Heawood Kate Sessford Melissa Baker Kerstin Baiker Barbara Blacklaws Jasmeet Kaler Laura Green Sabine Tötemeyer

Footrot is a common inflammatory bacterial disease affecting the health and welfare of sheep worldwide. The pathogenesis of footrot is complex and multifactorial. The primary causal pathogen is the anaerobic bacterium Dichelobacter nodosus, with Fusobacterium necrophorum also shown to play a key role in disease. Since immune-mediated pathology is implicated, the aim of this research was to inve...

Journal: :Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience 2008
G J Nieuwhof S C Bishop W G Hill H W Raadsma

Footrot is a highly contagious bacterial disease of sheep affecting the interdigital skin and surrounding soft and hard horn of a hoof, often resulting in severe lameness. This study was aimed at estimating the effect of footrot on weight gain of affected animals, and characterising the variation between animals in terms of phenotypic, environmental and genetic components. A general approach wa...

2012
J Kaler S A Wani I Hussain S A Beg M Makhdoomi Z A Kabli L E Green

BACKGROUND No clinical trials have been conducted in India on the efficacy of parenteral antibacterials to treat footrot in sheep. In addition, there are no studies worldwide on the efficacy of parenteral antibacterials to treat chronic footrot. Sixty two sheep with acute footrot and 30 sheep with chronic footrot from 7 villages in Kashmir, India were recruited into two separate trials. Sheep w...

2015
Gry M Grøneng Synnøve Vatn Anja Bråthen Kristoffersen Ola Nafstad Petter Hopp

When severe footrot was detected in Norway in 2008, a surveillance programme was initiated and followed by an elimination programme. By 2013 the disease had spread to two of 19 counties and a total of 119 (1%) sheep flocks had been diagnosed with severe footrot. A simulation model was developed to estimate the potential spread of severe footrot in Norway and to estimate the relative importance ...

2018
Joseph William Angell Dai H Grove-White Jennifer S Duncan

Footrot is an ovine foot disease of infectious origin and a cause of serious welfare and economic compromise in affected animals and flocks. The development of footrot in sheep is associated with the infectious agent Dichelobacter nodosus, which may invade as a primary pathogen, but the risk of disease is increased following damage to the interdigital skin of the foot. In this study, we used da...

2013
Dongbo Sun Hong Zhang Donghua Guo Anguo Sun Hongbin Wang

The plasma proteome of healthy dairy cattle and those with footrot was investigated using a shotgun LC-MS/MS approach. In total, 648 proteins were identified in healthy plasma samples, of which 234 were non-redundant proteins and 123 were high-confidence proteins; 712 proteins were identified from footrot plasma samples, of which 272 were non-redundant proteins and 138 were high-confidence prot...

2017
Grazieli Maboni Adam Blanchard Sara Frosth Ceri Stewart Richard Emes Sabine Tötemeyer

Ovine footrot is a highly prevalent bacterial disease caused by Dichelobacter nodosus and characterised by the separation of the hoof horn from the underlying skin. The role of innate immune molecules and other bacterial communities in the development of footrot lesions remains unclear. This study shows a significant association between the high expression of IL1β and high D. nodosus load in fo...

2016
Sara Frosth

Ovine footrot is a contagious bacterial disease primarily caused by Dichelobacter nodosus. Footrot affects the feet of sheep and is characterised by two major clinical presentations. The milder form consists of inflammation confined to the interdigital space (interdigital dermatitis or benign footrot) and the more severe form includes underrunning of the hoof horn (underrunning or virulent foot...

2014
DRH Robertson

This study was conducted on a commercial New Zealand sheep farm in order to compare the cure rates of merino sheep infected with footrot. Infected sheep were treated with either lincomycin/spectinomycin combination (Linco-Spectin soluble powder, Pfizer Animal Health) or tilmicosin (Micotil 300 Injection, ELANCO) antibiotics. A flock of 3000 mixed age merino ewes had their feet inspected by the ...

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