Immunological parameters were studied among 23 late-term bovine fetuses. Epizootic bovine abortion (EBA) disease was induced in fetuses by feeding Ornithodoros coriaceus ticks on pregnant heifers. A spirochaete-like microorganism was detected in the blood of diseased fetuses and in inapparent natural infections in some abattoir-collected fetuses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe disease referred to as epizootic bovine abortion (EBA) was experimentally induced in bovine fetuses. Dark-field microscopy was used to detect congenital infection with an unclassified spirochaete-like organism. Some of the fetuses collected at abattoirs were also found to be naturally infected with a morphologically similar microorganism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Soc Exp Biol Med
July 1988
Inhaled ozone was found to exert an enhancing effect for allergic lung sensitization when mice contracted an aerosolized allergen. The animals were exposed to ozone concentrations of 0.24, 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA spirochete-like organism was found in the plasma of bovine fetuses affected with epizootic bovine abortion (EBA). The spirochete-like organism was frequently found in abattoir-collected fetuses as an inapparent infection, and EBA was found in cattle on foothill rangeland where the vector tick Ornithodorus coriaceus could repeatedly reintroduce the infectious agent into pregnant cattle (superinfection). Epizootic bovine abortion resembled a naturally acquired superinfection in circumstances where the agent was frequently present in the environment under conditions favoring transmission.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Vet Med Assoc
February 1986
Congenital spirochetosis was encountered as a newly recognized infection of cattle. The spirochete was seen in blood of fetuses with lesions of epizootic bovine abortion. A spirochete with morphologic features similar to those found in the fetuses was detected in Ornithodoros coriaceus ticks.
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