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Query: UMLS:C0014070 (
encephalomyelitis
)
13,017
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The specificity of a fluorescent conjugate to infectious laryngotracheitis virus was examined using chick trachea organ culture or tissue sections infected with other avian viruses (adenovirus, infectious bronchitis, poxvirus, reovirus, Newcastle disease virus,
Marek's disease
virus, avian
encephalomyelitis
and infectious bursal agent) or Mycoplasma gallisepticum. Confirmation of virus replication in these preparations was obtained by either 1) demonstration of virus titre increase or 2) demonstration of fluorescence when using the homologous conjugate. Once either of these criteria had been satisfied, negative results with the infectious laryngotracheitis conjugate were taken to indicate that the conjugate would not present false positive results in differentiated cells infected with these heterologous viruses. The spectrum of reactivity of the infectious laryngotracheitis conjugate was then examined on organ cultures infected with several infectious laryngotracheitis isolates from across Canada. Finally, the conjugate was applied to experimental and natural cases of infectious laryngotracheitis and its efficiency was compared to routine virus isolation methods.
...
PMID:Sensitivity and specificity of the fluorescent antibody technique for detection of infectious laryngotracheitis virus. 20 27
Chickens fed the androgen analog mibolerone during the first 7 weeks of life regress their bursa of Fabricius but can be properly immunized by vaccination against avian pathogens of major economic importance such as Newcastle disease virus, infectious laryngotracheitis virus, avian
encephalomyelitis
virus, infectious bronchitis virus, fowl pox virus,
Marek's disease
virus, and Pasteurella multocida, the pathogen causing fowl cholera. These findings on immunocompetence to infectious agents are important because we have previously shown that the administration of mibolerone prevents the development of lymphoid leukosis tumors.
...
PMID:Vaccination immunity to selected diseases in chickens fed the androgen analog mibolerone. 20 30
Studied were morphologically a total of 234 birds for infectious encephalomyelitis (IE) and atypic
encephalomyelitis
(AE) of which 70 were experimentally infected with standard reference strains of IE (Calnek 1143-42 birds, and Van Roeckel 28 birds), 32 were infected with a brain suspension of affected with AE birds, and 110 were spontaneously affected with AE. Those of the birds that were infected with the standard strains of IE as well as with the brain suspension exhibited changes in the central nervous system in the form of a non-suppurative
encephalomyelitis
, and in the viscera--lymphoidcell proliferations. These alterations proved analogous with those observed in birds spontaneously affected with AE. The changes in CNS in the case of IE were localized in the brain and the spinal cord, while the lesions in the case of AE were found chiefly in the brain. In AE there were perivascular lymphoidcell were groupings along the peripheral nerves. It was concluded that the histologic changes established may well serve to differentiate IE from AE in
Marek's disease
, the transitional paralysis, the Newcastle disease, and the alimentary encephalomalacia.
...
PMID:[Comparative study of infectious and atypical encephalomyelitis in birds]. 101 70
Wild turkeys (Meleagridis gallopavo silvestris) trapped as part of a relocation program by the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission were tested for selected infectious diseases and parasites. The 45 birds were trapped at four locations in Pope, Scott, and Montgomery counties (Arkansas, USA). Forty-four blood samples for serology, 27 blood smears and 12 fecal samples were collected. Of the serum samples tested, 20 of 44 (45%) were positive for Pasteurella multocida by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), 42 of 44 (95%) were positive for Bordetella avium by ELISA, and 15 of 44 (34%) were positive for Newcastle disease virus antibody by the hemagglutination inhibition test. All serum samples were negative for Mycoplasma gallisepticum, Mycoplasma synoviae, avian paramyxovirus 3, avian influenza, hemorrhagic enteritis,
Marek's disease
, avian
encephalomyelitis
, laryngotracheitis, Salmonella pullorum and Salmonella gallinarum. Haemoproteus meleagridis was found in eight of 27 (30%) and Leucocytozoon smithi in nine of 27 (33%) blood smears; all smears were negative for Plasmodium hermani. Enteric parasites included Ascaridia dissimilis, Heterakis gallinarum, Eimeria dispersa and Raillietina spp. This study was an attempt to document the health status and disease exposure of wild turkeys in Arkansas to aid in managing and preventing the spread of disease agents to wild turkeys and other species of birds.
...
PMID:A survey of infectious diseases in wild turkeys (Meleagridis gallopavo silvestris) from Arkansas. 225 Mar 23
One-hundred-seventy-two serum samples, collected sequentially from four flocks of egg- and meat-type chickens, were evaluated for antibodies to multiple infectious agents by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (MELISA). The MELISA system used provided simultaneous measurement of antibody titers against avian infectious bronchitis (IB), infectious bursal disease (BD), Newcastle disease, avian
encephalomyelitis
and reovirus infections, and Mycoplasma gallisepticum. The use of computer-generated graphic print outs of relative MELISA titers provided immediate visulization of over 740 data points and convenient detection of any temporal changes in median titer class (MTC). The temporally changing MTC, or flock profiles obtained, indicated that negligible or waning IB immunity may be a common occurrence in previously vaccinated commercial chickens. These profiles further suggested that, despite no IB revaccination, these same flocks experienced episodes of reexposure to IB which otherwise may have been difficult to detect by conventional clinical or diagnostic laboratory protocols. MELISA profiles and sequential histologic examinations of bursas of Fabricius also provided evidence of a possible BD vaccination problem in young chickens that also experienced excessive losses from coccidiosis, ulcerative enteritis, and
Marek's disease
. Short sampling intervals were found to foster the detection and definition of fluctuations in MTC which otherwise may have been missed.
...
PMID:Presumptive diagnosis of subclinical infections utilizing computer-assisted analysis of sequential enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays against multiple antigens. 404 57
Pigeon herpes
encephalomyelitis
virus (PHEV) was compared with seven avian herpesviruses for antigenic relatedness using monospecific antisera and the indirect fluorescent-antibody (IFA), agar-gel-immunodiffusion, and serum-neutralization tests. No antigenic relationship was detected between PHEV and
Marek's disease
virus, turkey herpesvirus, infectious laryngotracheitis virus, and duck enteritis virus. A common precipitating antigen was detected between the PHEV and pigeon herpesvirus (PHV), owl herpesvirus (OHV), and falcon herpesvirus (FHV). These four viruses also cross-reacted in the IFA test. Weak neutralizing activity was detected only between PHV antiserum and PHEV. These results suggest that the PHEV should be classified as a herpesvirus related to, but distinct from, the PHV-OHV-FHV group of viruses with which it shares common antigens.
...
PMID:Antigenic relatedness of pigeon herpes encephalomyelitis virus to other avian herpesviruses. 619 14
No antibodies against Salmonella pullorum, Mycoplasma gallisepticum, Mycoplasma synoviae, Haemophilus gallinarum, fowl pox virus,
Marek's disease
virus, herpes virus of turkey, infectious laryngotracheitis virus, avian adenovirus, avian reovirus, infectious bursal disease virus, reticuloendotheliosis virus, avian leukosis virus, avian
encephalomyelitis
virus and Newcastle disease virus were detectable in the sera obtained from these chickens in 3 generations at various ages. Antibodies against infectious bronchitis virus were detected in the sera of the 3rd generations at 66, 74 and 108 weeks of age. The performances of these chickens was nearly the same as that of conventional healthy chickens in the poultry industry, with no tendency to decline.
...
PMID:Performance of 3 successive generations of specified-pathogenfree chickens maintained as a closed flock. 625 42
During the years 1974 to 1979 a virological study on domestic poultry throughout Papua New Guinea was conducted involving clinical examination of diseased birds with subsequent attempted virus isolations and serological surveys of free village fowls and commercial poultry. Viruses isolated included those of Newcastle disease, infectious bronchitis, pox, avian
encephalomyelitis
and adenovirus. Clinical and pathological diagnoses of pox, avian
encephalomyelitis
, reticuloendotheliosis and
Marek's disease
were made. The serological survey included tests for Newcastle disease, influenza A, adenovirus,
Marek's disease
, pox, avian
encephalomyelitis
and infectious bursal disease virus. Antibody was demonstrated to all of these viruses except for bursal disease.
...
PMID:Survey of some poultry viruses in Papua New Guinea. 710 63
In 1991, 69% of the cockerels and 15% of the pullets in an inbred flock of approximately 200 dark and light Brahma chickens had unilateral or bilateral cataracts and crooked toes. Affected chickens were normal at hatching but developed cataracts with or without crooked toes by 6 months of age. The cataracts were initially focal and polar but progressed to be diffuse throughout the lenticular cortex. The crooked toes involved one or more of the second, third, and fourth digits and were due to a medial deviation of the distal aspect of the first phalanx. The cataracts and crooked toes were considered likely due to a hereditary defect, based on the following: the history of flock inbreeding; the lack of historical, clinical, or pathological evidence of avian
encephalomyelitis
or
Marek's disease
; the presence of lesions only in Brahma chickens and not in the approximately 200 other chickens on the farm kept under the same management and environmental conditions; the age at which the lesions occurred; and the nature of the lesions.
...
PMID:Cataracts and crooked toes in Brahma chickens. 814 48
Outbreaks of neonatal multifocal encephalomalacia with sepsis have been reported among flocks of very young chicks in Belgium, Scotland, and the United States. The purposes of the present study were to describe intralesional bacterial cocci in chicks with this type of encephalomalacia and to determine its incidence during 1991-95, and to determine the importance of this lesion with respect to the frequency of all other brain lesions/ diseases during the same time period. All laboratory records of broiler chickens examined at the Georgia Poultry Laboratory from Jan. 1, 1991, through Dec. 31, 1995, where the histopathologic diagnoses included the letter string *encephal* were retrieved for further study. The leading etiology for brain disease was nutritional encephalomalacia (57%), followed by neonatal encephalomalacia (22%), septic meningoencephalitis (16%), and
Marek's disease
(14%), in turn followed by nonpurulent encephalitis (7%), avian
encephalomyelitis
(3%), and mycotic meningoencephalitis (3%). Diagnosis of neonatal multifocal encephalomalacia with sepsis in the brains of Georgia chicks is a perennial one. Microscopically, the condition is characterized by mild to maximal multifocal locally extensive fibrin thrombosis of blood capillaries, and necrosis (encephalomalacia, malacia) of surrounding zones of brain stem and/or cerebral hemisphere neuropile. In 44% of cases of neonatal encephalomalacia fibrin thrombosis of blood capillaries was accompanied by intralesional gram-positive coccoid bacteria that were most abundant in medium- and small-sized arterioles or venules. Only gram-positive coccoid bacteria are found in cases of neonatal encephalomalacia (P < 0.05), and only gram-negative rod-shaped bacteria are found in cases of septic meningoencephalitis (P < 0.05). Therefore, bacterial culture and routine light microscopic histopathology are sufficient for diagnosing the condition when the differential diagnosis for neurologic disease in chicks includes neonatal encephalomalacia.
...
PMID:Neonatal multifocal encephalomalacia and other lesions in the brains of Georgia chicks: 1991-95. 898 Aug 22
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