Toward ubiquitous mobility solutions for body sensor networks on healthcare
Lorenz, Pascal
2012-09-11T15:28:35Z
Type
book
Publisher
Identifier
Matos, Ana Cristina [et al.] (2021) - Mycobacteriosis in Wildlife: A General Approach. E-ISBN: 978-93-93336-02-6. http://www.publishbookonline.com/archives/2021/3-1-21
978-93-93336-02-6
Title
Mycobacteriosis in wildlife: a general approach
Subject
Mycobacteria
Wild animals
Diagnostic
PCR
Wild animals
Diagnostic
PCR
Date
2022-01-05T12:44:03Z
2022-01-05T12:44:03Z
2021
2022-01-05T12:44:03Z
2021
Description
Mycobacterial species are raising serious concerns in livestock and wild animals worldwide. In wildlife, mycobacterial infection has been reported in hundreds of species and likely has the potential to occur in every vertebrate. Since this infection is of a chronic nature the best strategy to control the infection is through early identification of infected animals, and better diagnostic measures are required for effective control programs.
With the development of new molecular methods for detecting and characterizing microorganisms, the ecology of mycobacteria has rapidly advanced in all areas. In human medicine, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays are accepted diagnostic standards, replacing or complementing culture isolation and acid-fast staining.
The mycobacterial species that produce tuberculosis in humans and animals are included in the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTC). Mycobacteria from the Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) cause a variety of diseases including tuberculosis-like disease in humans and birds, disseminated infections in immunocompromised patients, lymphadenitis in humans and mammals and paratuberculosis in ruminants.
This manuscript is a review of the scientific literature on the classification and biology, epidemiology, clinical signs, pathology, diagnostic techniques, and public health concerns of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium avium complexes in wild mammals.
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Access restrictions
restrictedAccess
Language
eng
Comments