9 results match your criteria: "Centre National d'Etudes sur la Rage et la Pathologie des Animaux Sauvages[Affiliation]"

Six red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) were given oral doses of homogenized liver from rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) that died from rabbit viral hemorrhagic disease (RVHD) and four control foxes were given liver from uninfected rabbits. Antibodies to RVHD virus were monitored over 6 months. There was a pronounced antibody response 7 days after exposure which persisted to 14 days and then diminished.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Surveillance of wild animal diseases in Europe.

Rev Sci Tech

September 1995

Centre national d'études vétérinaires et alimentaires (CNEVA-Nancy), Laboratoire d'études sur la rage et la pathologie des animaux sauvages, Malzéville, France.

A study of the methods and personnel involved in general surveillance of wild animal diseases in Europe was conducted by correspondence and personal interview in 1993-1994. Twenty-seven of the thirty-six countries contacted participated in the study. A great range was observed in the intensity of surveillance programmes and the details of their organisation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Epidemiology of contagious diseases, ecology of mammals, health, management and conservation biology: concluding remarks.

Rev Sci Tech

March 1993

Centre national d'études vétérinaires et alimentaires, Laboratoire d'études sur la rage et la pathologie des animaux sauvages (CNEVA/LERPAS), Malzéville, France.

In conclusion to the Proceedings of the Symposium on the Health and management of free-ranging mammals (held in Nancy, France, in 1991), the author presents a review of the literature on the ecology of diseases of wild mammals. This discipline involves the ecology of both pathogens and hosts. The ecology of a pathogen may be considered as a synonym of epidemiology, i.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Practical significance of rabies antibodies in cats and dogs.

Rev Sci Tech

September 1992

Centre national d'études vétérinaires et alimentaires, Laboratoire d'études sur la rage et la pathologie des animaux sauvages, Malzéville, France.

Doubt has sometimes been cast upon the protective effect of rabies antibodies in serum. Animals and humans suffering from fatal rabies often produce high antibody titres, while rabies cases are also observed in vaccinated animals. Cellular immunity is also largely involved in protection.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Two rabies virus strains collected from naturally infected foxes in France in 1976 and 1986 were inoculated in 2 groups each consisting of 10 foxes (approximately 50 lethal doses50 mouse intracerebral per fox). Another 20 healthy foxes were kept in the same cages as the inoculated animals in order to study the transmission of both strains. All the inoculated foxes became rabid and transmitted rabies to their cage companion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Red fox behavioural ecology was studied in a rabies-enzootic area in order to determine how population size is balanced despite rabies-induced mortality. The results suggest that the red fox rabies virus equilibrium evolves, and is due to the solitary behaviour pattern of the fox which reduces the risk of virus transmission from on territory to another; and to the subsequent autumn dispersal, which allows the local fox population to recover in the space of under a year. The hypothesis is put forward that rabies does not seem to regulate fox population size.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although fox rabies has been reported in every country that has foxes, current foci of fox rabies are limited to Europe and North America. The fox rabies virus has unique characteristics that seem to be the result of adaptation through successive passages, i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

[Diagnosis of rabies by cell culture].

Comp Immunol Microbiol Infect Dis

March 1989

Ministère de l'Agriculture, Centre National d'Etudes sur la Rage et la Pathologie des Animaux Sauvages, Malzéville, France.

Mouse inoculation test (MIT) is a highly sensitive test for rabies diagnosis but slow and expensive. To detect rabies virus an in vitro technique using Neuro 2a cell culture (CC) was compared with MIT in two laboratories. In one laboratory, CC appeared to be on the whole more sensitive than MIT, nevertheless MIT was the only one to detect some positive samples.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A strain bearing two mutations which abolish the virulence for adult animals after intracerebral or intramuscular inoculation has been constructed from the CVS strain of rabies virus. This apathogenic phenotype is stable after three successive passages of the double mutant in suckling mice brain. Trials of vaccination performed on mice in parallel with the double mutant and CVS both inactivated with beta-propiolactone indicate that the mutant is at least as efficient as CVS.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF