phenylephrine-hydrochloride has been researched along with Psittacosis* in 3 studies
3 other study(ies) available for phenylephrine-hydrochloride and Psittacosis
Article | Year |
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An Unusual Outbreak of Chlamydiosis in Commercial Turkeys Involving the Nasal Glands.
An unusual outbreak of chlamydiosis was diagnosed in 15,000, 13-wk-old organically grown turkeys housed in a semiconfinement housing system. The disease was characterized by unilateral or bilateral swelling above the eye due to mild-to-severe inflammation of the nasal glands in 3%-5% of the birds. Except for a slight drop in feed and water consumption, the birds did not exhibit any respiratory signs, morbidity, and mortality. Chlamydiosis in the turkeys was confirmed by immunofluorescence, immunohistochemistry, and PCR assay of the nasal glands. Other samples such as conjunctiva, lungs, air sacs, heart, liver, spleen, and feces were negative for chlamydia by florescence antibody test in birds submitted over several weeks. Chlamydia psittaci strain B was isolated in chicken egg embryos and typed by multilocus sequence variable number of tandem repeats analysis, multilocus sequence typing, and ompA gene sequencing as a CP3-like strain. This is the first report of a naturally occurring chlamydiosis affecting the nasal glands in turkeys. Topics: Animals; Chlamydophila psittaci; Disease Outbreaks; Female; Nose; Poultry Diseases; Psittacosis; Turkeys | 2015 |
Chlamydia psittaci infection of horses with respiratory disease.
Two strains of Chlamydia psittaci were isolated from the nasal tract of horses with acute respiratory disease. These 2 isolates (NS 121 and NS 172) were characterized as chlamydia on the basis of their morphology, tinctorial property, growth in chicken embryos, inability to grow on bacterial media and their possession of chlamydial common complement fixing group antigen. They were identified as C. psittaci on the basis of resistance to sodium sulphadiazine. The present strains were not pathogenic to mice and guinea pigs and non-toxigenic. They induced antibodies and caused latent infection in mice and guinea pigs. Acute and convalescent sera were avaliable from one of the horses and rising levels of specific antibody were demonstrated. No chlamydia were isolated from the materials of 14 aborted foals, 4 synovial fluids from horses with acute polyarthritis and nasal, tracheal and lung material from another 276 horses. Topics: Animals; Chick Embryo; Chlamydophila psittaci; Female; Horse Diseases; Horses; Male; Mice; Nose; Pregnancy; Psittacosis; Respiratory Tract Infections | 1978 |
[Studies on ornithosis in ducks. V. The diagnosis of ornithosis in ducks by the demonstration of the virus in the nasal cavity].
Topics: Animals; Body Temperature; Chlamydia; Complement Fixation Tests; Ducks; Nose; Poultry Diseases; Psittacosis | 1966 |