1 results match your criteria: "National Centers for Animal Health Leptospira Working Group[Affiliation]"
Front Vet Sci
May 2024
National Centers for Animal Health Leptospira Working Group, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Ames, IA, United States.
Equine leptospirosis can result in abortion, stillbirth, neonatal death, placentitis, and uveitis. Horses can also act as subclinical reservoir hosts of infection, which are characterized as asymptomatic carriers that persistently excrete leptospires and transmit disease. In this study, PCR and culture were used to assess urinary shedding of pathogenic from 37 asymptomatic mares.
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