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Query: UMLS:C0026936 (
Mycoplasma
)
14,761
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mastitis
due to
mycoplasma
has been reported sporadically from several countries in Europe, Australia, Israel, New Zealand, and many states in the United States. Most reported occurrences are due to
Mycoplasma
bovis, but 5 other mycoplasmas are reported to cause mastitis. A total of 5 species of
mycoplasma
have been isolated from cows with mastitis in California. Therapy trials with M bovis infections have not been encouraging. Recovery is slow, and shedding of
mycoplasma
into milk of apparently recovered cows for an indefinite period is common.
...
PMID:Mycoplasma and mycoplasma mastitis. 32 36
The clinical pattern as well as the pathologico-anatomic or histological changes due to
mycoplasma
mastitis are neither specific nor pathognomic.
Mastitis
pathogens so far described included M. bovis, M. bovigenitalium, A. laidlawii, A. axanthum, M. alkalescens, M. canadense, M. dispar, M. bovirhinis, strains of Group 7 according to Leach, strain ST 6, and ureaplasma strains. In the GDR, enzootic mastitis has been confined to A. laidlawii and A. axanthum.
...
PMID:[Studies of bovine mycoplasma mastitis. 1. Review of literature on the occurrence of bovine mastitis with Mycoplasma involvement]. 39 95
A 6-year-old female goat was admitted with right-sided subauricular swelling and facial nerve paralysis.
Mastitis
developed subsequently. The subauricular swelling localized to a mass and was excised.
Mycoplasma
mycoides subsp mycoides was cultured from samples obtained from the mass and mammary gland. After clinical improvement, the goat was discharged to the owner with instructions to isolate the goat and to submit milk samples from the rest of the herd for microbial culturing.
Mycoplasma
spp can spread to other tissues from an initial site of infection. In goats with clinical signs similar to those of the goat of this report, samples should be obtained for microbial culture on
Mycoplasma
medium. Goats infected with
Mycoplasma
spp should be isolated or culled because of the risk of transmission to uninfected animals.
...
PMID:Mycoplasma mycoides subspecies mycoides as the cause of a subauricular abscess and mastitis in a goat. 142 89
The study was conducted to determine whether pre-enrichment would increase sensitivity of detecting Streptococcus (Str.) agalactiae, Staphylococcus (S.) aureus, and
mycoplasma
in bovine milk. Two procedures were followed, one involving direct inoculation of milk on bovine blood agar, and the other involving preenrichment in broth followed by inoculation on agar. Logistic regression was used to predict the probability of isolation as a function of culture procedure and two additional covariates, the California
Mastitis
Test (CMT) score of the milk and the type of sample (indicating sample storage temperature and herd mastitis status). A total of 13778 milk samples was cultured for each of the three bacteria. By using results of both direct inoculation and pre-enrichment, the probability of isolation compared to use of direct inoculation only and adjusted for effects of other variables was increased 3.6-fold for Str. agalactiae, 1.6-fold for S. aureus and 1.7-fold for
mycoplasma
. The probability of isolation for all three bacteria increased as the CMT score increased. For Str. agalactiae, there was a statistical interaction predicting that enrichment improved the odds of isolation more from milk with high CMT scores than from milk with low scores. Results indicate that pre-enrichment can substantially increase the sensitivity of bacteriological screening of dairy cows for mastitis caused by Str. agalactiae, S. aureus, and
mycoplasma
.
...
PMID:The effect of pre-enrichment on recovery of Streptococcus agalactiae, Staphylococcus aureus and mycoplasma from bovine milk. 269 Dec 66
The effect of vaccination on mycoplasmal infection and the cellular inflammatory response was evaluated in 4 vaccinated and 4 control cows experimentally challenged in 2 of 4 quarters with live
Mycoplasma
bovis. In unchallenged quarters during the first three weeks after experimental challenge exposure, 6 of 8 quarters on control cows, and 7 of 8 quarters on vaccinated cows became infected with low numbers (10(2)-10(4) cfu/ml) of M bovis. During the same period all challenge-infused quarters on both control and vaccinated animals became infected with high numbers (10(9) cfu/ml) of M bovis. Thereafter, all quarters on vaccinated cows became culture-negative for M bovis, while 2 of 8 unchallenged quarters, and 4 of 8 challenged quarters on 3 of 4 control cows remained infected. A cellular inflammatory response as measured by the California
Mastitis
Test accompanied the experimental infection in proportion to the infection level except in challenged quarters on vaccinated cows after the first three weeks post challenge in which the cellular inflammatory response remained high despite the advent of negative M bovis culture results. This study indicates that the course of experimental M bovis mastitis can be affected by vaccination, and that vaccination results in an adverse cellular inflammatory response in challenged quarters.
...
PMID:Experimental intramammary inoculation with Mycoplasma bovis in vaccinated and unvaccinated cows: effect on the mycoplasmal infection and cellular inflammatory response. 369 1
The effect of vaccination on milk production was evaluated in vaccinated and control cows experimentally challenged in two of four quarters with live
Mycoplasma
bovis. During the first three weeks after experimental challenge, six of eight unchallenged quarters on vaccinated cows and seven of eight unchallenged quarters on control cows became infected. Most of these quarters secreted normal milk, with negative California
Mastitis
Test scores and maintained normal milk production throughout most of the study (although some quarters on control cows remained infected). All challenged quarters became infected, had strong California
Mastitis
Test reactions, and had a drastic (greater than 85%) loss in milk production. Thereafter, four of eight challenged quarters on control cows remained infected, had mostly positive California
Mastitis
Test scores, produced mostly normal-appearing milk, and recovered some productive capabilities. By the end of the study no M. bovis could be recovered from challenged quarters on vaccinated cows and the milk appeared mostly normal. The California
Mastitis
Test scores on these quarters, however, remained elevated and milk production remained very low.
...
PMID:Experimental intramammary inoculation with Mycoplasma bovis in vaccinated and unvaccinated cows: effect on milk production and milk quality. 375 74
Mastitis
in 85 of 140 dry cows and 16 of 101 milking animals on one farm was shown to be caused by
Mycoplasma
californicum. The infection was eradicated from the herd over a five month period by a combined programme of identification, segregation and culling of infected animals. Some dry cows produced a self-cure, but the majority calved with nonfunctional quarters which produced very little colostrum and resulted in a high incidence of calf mortality. The source of the infection could not be established, but it was probably spread in the dry cows by the unhygienic application of long acting intramammary antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Mycoplasma californicum mastitis in the dry dairy cow. 378 92
Mastitis
was reproduced experimentally by inoculating the lactating mammary glands of 12 ewes with
Mycoplasma
californicum. Large numbers of mycoplasmas were recovered from the milk. The mastitis had a lobular distribution and was characterized in the early stages by degeneration of the secretory epithelium and intense leucocytic infiltration of alveolar and ductal lumina. Later there was widespread alveolar involution, and lymphohistiocytic infiltration and fibrosis of the interstitium. A monoclonal antibody-based immunohistochemical technique detected M. californicum antigen in alveolar and ductal lumina but not in epithelium or interstitial tissue. This report is the first description of the pathological features of M. californicum mastitis in ewes.
...
PMID:The pathology of experimental Mycoplasma californicum mastitis in ewes. 824 31
Mycoplasma
bovis was detected in 134 (18 per cent) of 736 samples of bovine lung tissue collected from fatal pneumonia cases in the Republic of Ireland between April 1995 and December 1998. The cases occurred in 95 herds and recurred in four of them. Other respiratory pathogens were identified in 66 per cent of the M bovis-positive cases, with Pasteurella species, infectious bovine rhinotracheitis and parainfluenza 3 virus being most frequently detected.
Mastitis
and arthritis were less common clinical signs associated with M bovis infection; 22 cases of M bovis mastitis and five cases of M bovis arthritis were diagnosed in five herds.
...
PMID:Isolation of Mycoplasma bovis from bovine clinical samples in the Republic of Ireland. 1131 91
A real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay using hybridization probes on a LightCycler platform was developed for detection of
Mycoplasma
bovis from individual bovine mastitis milk and pneumonic lung tissues. The detection limit was 550 colony forming units (cfu)/ml of milk and 650 cfu/25 mg of lung tissue. A panel of bovine
Mycoplasma
and of other bovine-origin bacteria were tested; only M. bovis strains were positive, with a melting peak of 66.6 degrees C.
Mycoplasma
agalactiae PG2 was also positive and could be distinguished because it had a melting peak of 63.1 degrees C. In validation testing of clinical samples, the relative sensitivity and specificity were 100% and 99.3% for individual milks and 96.6% and 100% for the lung tissue. Using M. bovis real-time PCR, the M. bovis culture-positive milk samples were estimated to contain between 5 x 10(4) and 7.7 x 10(8) cfu/ml and the M. bovis culture-positive lungs between 1 x 10(3) and 1 x 10(9) cfu/25 mg. Isolation, confirmed with the real-time PCR and colony fluorescent antibody test, showed that at the herd level, the proportion of samples positive for M. bovis isolation in mastitis milk samples submitted to the
Mastitis
Laboratory, Animal Health Laboratory, University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada, was 2.4% (5/201). We conclude that this probe-based real-time PCR assay is a sensitive, specific, and rapid method to identify M. bovis infection in bovine milk and pneumonic lungs.
...
PMID:Development of a real-time PCR for detection of Mycoplasma bovis in bovine milk and lung samples. 1647 11
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