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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A bacteriological and serological survey for evidence of contagious equine
metritis
(CEM) was made during the 1980 breeding season on 3 horse studs in South Australia with a history of previous infection. Swabs from the clitoral sinus and the cervix were cultured for
Haemophilus
equigenitalis and serum was screened for antibody using the complement fixation test (CFT) and the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The specificity of both tests was greater than 0.99 but the ELISA was more sensitive in detecting antibody in infected mares. On the evidence presented it was concluded that H. equigenitalis is no longer present in the horse studs investigated.
...
PMID:Serological and bacteriological survey of three horse studs for contagious equine metritis. 670 67
Serological response of pony mares to contagious equine
metritis
is studied comparing three techniques: slow agglutination, complement fixation and indirect immunofluorescence. Sera were taken from pony mares vaccinated with a heat inactivated suspension of
Haemophilus
equigenitalis, from experimentally-infected pony mares and from healthy horses. All three reactions detected antibodies in vaccinated and infected animals. The highest titers are observed with vaccinated mares. Titers are low in infected animals. Antibodies detected by indirect immunofluorescence appeared sooner and persisted longer in diseased animals than agglutinating or complement fixing antibodies. Only indirect immunofluorescence revealed a new contamination of two mares following coitus with a stallion excreting H. equigenitalis. Indirect immunofluorescence must be recommended in diagnosis of contagious equine
metritis
and in detection of chronic carriers.
...
PMID:[A serological study of the contagious equine metritis: comparison between indirect immunofluorescence, slow agglutination and complement fixation techniques (author's transl)]. 704 10
Equine neutrophils were combined with
Haemophilus
equigenitalis (contagious equine
metritis
organism; CEMO) or Escherichia coli in low- and high-antibody-titer serum to evaluate the neutrophils ability to phagocytize and kill these bacteria. More E. coli than CEMO were phagocytized at each time period. After 120 min in low-antibody-titer serum, 56.3% of the E. coli and 34.3% of the CEMO were phagocytized. A total of 45% of CEMO and 74.9% of E. coli were phagocytized by 120 min when neutrophils were in high-antibody-titer serum. More than 75% of the ingested E. coli and 90% of the ingested CEMO were killed within 210 min of incubation. Fewer E. coli than CEMO were killed at any given time period. Ultrastructural examination showed CEMO to be degraded in the neutrophil. Degradation was the most extensive in neutrophils in high-titer serum. It is suggested that CEMO is a pathogenic extracellular bacterium incapable of prolonged intracellular survival and that it is slower to be phagocytized than a nonpathogenic E. coli.
...
PMID:Phagocytosis and intracellular killing of the contagious equine metritis organism by equine neutrophils in serum. 712 36
Immunoelectrophoresis of ultrasonically disrupted
Haemophilus
equigenitalis (contagious equine
metritis
organism) cells against rabbit and equine antisera disclosed at least 11 precipitating antigens. Two of these, a polysaccharide and a lipopolysaccharide-protein complex, were of high molecular weight and located on the cell surface. The remaining antigens were intracellular and were small- to medium-sized proteins. The surface antigens were the most significant in relation to the serological response in infected horses. They also reacted with sera from apparently healthy cattle, but the reason for this was not determined. No serological cross-reaction between H. equigenitalis and species of Achromobacter and Moraxella was detected.
...
PMID:Characterization of the major antigens of Haemophilus equigenitalis (contagious equine metritis organism). 715 16
The cultural, biochemical, antigenic and antibiotic susceptibility characteristics of 17 strains of
Haemophilus
equigenitalis, the causative organism of contagious equine
metritis
(CEM), were studied. Biochemical characteristics were investigated using both conventional method and the API ZYM system of enzyme detection. The biochemical profile of the H. equigenitalis strains was unique and differed from the other bacterial species studied under the same experimental conditions (H. influenzae and H. parainfluenzae, B. abortus and B. melitensis, P. multocida, A. calcoaceticus). The required X and V factors were never demonstrated and therefore the placement of H. equigenitalis in the genus
Haemophilus
is discutable. This species presented an, antigenic homogeneity and exhibited no cross-reaction with the other strains tested in this study. Antibiotic susceptibility was studied by diffusion test and MIC determination. The strains were susceptible to all antibiotics with the exception of clindamycin, lincomycin and streptomycin; where the streptomycin resistance was inconstant.
...
PMID:[Bacteriological studies of Haemophilus equigenitalis Taylor 1978, the causative organism of contagious equine metritis 1977 (author's transl)]. 719 99
Haemophilus
equigenitalis, a proposed new species of
Haemophilus
and the causative agent of contagious equine
metritis
, a venereal disease of the horse, had ultrastructural characteristics of gram-negative bacteria. The organism additionally had a small, threadlike capsule that was removed by heating in phosphate-buffered saline solution. Heating also detached the outer membrane from the cytoplasmic membrane. The capsule could only be demonstrated when bacterial were stained with ruthenium red during the preparation of ultrathin sections. The gross morphology of newly isolated organisms (rodlike or coccal) depended upon the medium on which they were grown.
...
PMID:Ultrastructure of Haemophilus equigenitalis, causative agent of contagious equine metritis. 736 18
The vaccination of four ponies on two occasions with a formolised culture of
Haemophilus
equigenitalis produced a high circulating antibody titre to the organism in each pony. Three out of four vaccinated and all of three unvaccinated ponies developed typical symptoms of contagious equine
metritis
(CEM) when subsequently challenged with a vaginal exudate containing H equigenitalis. Similarly, three ponies which had previously been infected with H equigenitalis and which had recovered spontaneously also developed contagious equine
metritis
when rechallenged with the organism. The clinical and bacteriological symptoms in the vaccinated ponies and in the rechallenged ponies were less severe than those observed in the unvaccinated ponies but H equigenitalis was still recovered 17 days after challenge from the three vaccinated ponies which had developed CEM. The vaccinated pony which remained free from infection did not exhibit the highest circulating antibody titre of the vaccinates before challenge.
...
PMID:Observations on vaccine and post-infection immunity in contagious equine metritis. 741 90
An infection model in laboratory mice for studying the bacterium (proposed name
Haemophilus
equigenitalis) causing contagious equine
metritis
is described. Small porous chambers were implanted subcutaneously into mice and after 1 to 3 weeks were inoculated with H equigenitalis. Infections that persisted for > 30 days were established by direct transfer of infective chamber fluid or by injection of laboratory-grown cultures. Immunization of mice with formaldehyde-treated cells induced significant, strain-related immunity to infection and did not appear to require complement as a protection mediator. Substantial differences in staining characteristics and cell morphology were observed between bacteria grown in mouse chambers and those grown on a laboratory medium. These differences were more apparent in smears of the organism stained by a modified Gimenez method than in smears stained by the conventional Gram stain. This murine model may be a convenient and inexpensive method for studying the immunobiology of this newly discovered animal pathogen.
...
PMID:Murine infection model for contagious equine metritis: a new venereal disease of horses. 743 15
The 16S ribosomal DNA sequence of Taylorella equigenitalis (formerly
Haemophilus
equigenitalis), the causative organism of contagious equine
metritis
, was determined. A phylogenetic analysis of this sequence revealed a phylogenetic position of T. equigenitalis in the beta subclass of the class Proteobacteria apart from the position of
Haemophilus
influenzae, which belongs to the gamma subclass of Proteobacteria. A close phylogenetic relationship among T. equigenitalis, Alcaligenes xylosoxidans, and Bordetella bronchiseptica was detected; Spirillum volutans and Chromobacterium fluviatile (Iodobacter fluviatile) were in the same group but slightly removed. This relationship is surprising in view of the considerable differences in the G + C contents of the genomes of these bacteria.
...
PMID:Phylogenetic position of Taylorella equigenitalis determined by analysis of amplified 16S ribosomal DNA sequences. 834 20
Haemophilus
somnus was consistently isolated from vaginal discharges of dairy cows submitted from field cases of vaginitis, cervicitis and/or
metritis
in the KwaZulu-Natal Midlands during the period July 1995 - December 2000 and from the East Griqualand area in November/December 2000. The purulent vaginal discharges, red granular vaginitis and cervicitis, and pain on palpation described in these cases was very similar to that reported in outbreaks of H.somnus endometritis syndrome in Australia, Europe and North America. In all the herds involved in these outbreaks, natural breeding with bulls was employed. Although there was a good cure rate in clinically-affected animals treated with tetracyclines, culling rates for chronic infertility were unacceptably high. Employment of artificial insemination in these herds improved pregnancy rates in cows that had calved previously, but many cows that had formerly been infected failed to conceive.
...
PMID:Isolation of Haemophilus somnus from dairy cattle in kwaZulu-Natal. An emerging cause of 'dirty cow syndrome' and infertility? 1151 68
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