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Query: UNIPROT:Q9UIJ5 (
Rec
)
58,342
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bovine tuberculosis
was eradicated from Sweden after a programme lasting many years. By 1991, no tuberculosis in wildlife had been discovered for 50 years and the last case in cattle had occurred 13 years before. In 1991, the disease was identified in a herd of farmed fallow deer (Dama dama) and over the next three years nine other infected herds were identified. Investigation revealed that all the infected deer were either deer that had been imported into Sweden from the United Kingdom in 1987 or had been in contact with them. Restriction fragment analysis of eight isolates of Mycobacterium bovis from five of the herds showed that the isolates had identical patterns of DNA fragments, which indicated a common source of infection. Among more than 800 isolates of M bovis that have been analysed, these patterns were identical to those of only two previous isolates, both of which came from British deer. These results indicate that the eight Swedish strains of M bovis and the two British strains may have a common source of infection.
Vet
Rec
1995 Apr 22
PMID:Bovine tuberculosis in Swedish deer farms: epidemiological investigations and tracing using restriction fragment analysis. 762 58
Bovine tuberculosis
(TB) is a significant threat to the cattle industry in England and Wales. It is widely acknowledged that a combination of measures targeting both cattle and wildlife will be required to eradicate bovine TB or reduce its prevalence until European official freedom status is achieved. Vaccination of cattle and/or badgers could contribute to bovine TB control in Great Britain, although there are significant gaps in our knowledge regarding the impact that vaccination would actually have on bovine TB incidence. Laboratory studies have demonstrated that vaccination with BCG can reduce the progression and severity of TB in both badgers and cattle. This is encouraging in terms of the prospect of a sustained vaccination programme achieving reductions in disease prevalence; however, developing vaccines for tackling the problem of bovine TB is challenging, time-consuming and resource-intensive, as this review article sets out to explain.
Vet
Rec
2014 Jul 26
PMID:Vaccination against tuberculosis in badgers and cattle: an overview of the challenges, developments and current research priorities in Great Britain. 2525 33
Bovine tuberculosis
(TB) is a disease of zoonotic importance for which control and eradication programmes have been carried out in many countries for decades. While the impact of these programmes on public health is still uncertain, the impact on trade is significant because of movement restrictions for animals, costs of testing and culling. The objective of this systematic review was to provide a contribution to the general debate over costs against benefits for the control and eradication of bovine TB in cattle. The search strategy was performed on four electronic databases following the PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) guidelines. The selection process, data abstraction and quality appraisal were carried out according to the Cochrane Collaboration guidelines. The search identified 66 articles out of which eight fulfilled the inclusion criteria. The evidence gathered in this review by combining the conclusions of the most methodologically sound articles supports the idea that, when multiple cost and benefit components are taken into account, efforts to control or eradicate bovine TB may be effective in reducing disease prevalence, economically viable and worth doing.
Vet
Rec
2016 Jul 16
PMID:Control and eradication of tuberculosis in cattle: a systematic review of economic evidence. 2742 18
Bovine tuberculosis
(bovine TB, bTB) is caused by bovine bacilli:
Mycobacterium bovis
and
M caprae
The studies conducted in Poland, in the National
Bovine Tuberculosis
Reference Laboratory in the Department of Microbiology of the National Veterinary Research Institute in Pulawy, show that animal tuberculosis in Poland is also caused by
M caprae
We here describe the identification and genotypic assessment of 52 isolates of
M caprae
obtained from Polish cattle and wild animals over the last five years. We show that strains isolated from bison have significant genotypic diversity and are distinct compared with the genotypes of strains isolated from cattle. Similarly, isolates from cattle herds can be highly genotypically variable. Formal designation of the members of the
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
complex is controversial in Poland; there is a gap in veterinary legislation with regard to bTB and no explicit mention of
M caprae
causing tuberculosis in animal.
Vet
Rec
2018 03 10
PMID:Molecular characterisation of
Mycobacterium caprae
strains isolated in Poland. 2921 13