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BACKGROUND: Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is a rare syndrome that is often fatal despite treatment. It is caused by a dysregulation in natural killer T-cell function, resulting in activation and proliferation of histiocytes... more
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      MalariaZoonosesComorbidityBrucella
Five case reports on cowpox virus infections in cats, humans, and for the first time in a horse are presented. It becomes obvious that in most cases the diagnosis cowpox is suspected rather late, although fast and reliable diagnostic... more
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      ZoonosesCatsGermanyHorses
Echinococcosis is a frequent hepatic parasitic disease in several countries but it is practically absent in Mexico. A cattle strain of Echinococcus granulosus was identified by RAPD, PCR-RFLP and mitochondrial CO1 gene analysis in an... more
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      ZoonosesMexicoBiological SciencesPolymerase Chain Reaction
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      MicrobiologyEpidemiologyMedical MicrobiologyInfectious Diseases
A cross-sectional questionnaire-based study was conducted to assess milk producers' awareness of milkborne zoonoses in selected smallholder and commercial dairy farms of Zimbabwe. The questionnaire was designed to obtain information on... more
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      Public HealthZoonosesZimbabweDisease Control
A total of 2130 samples collected from diarrhea chicken, raw milk, milk products and stool of patient with diarrhea from Menia, Fayoum, Cairo and Qaluobya in Egypt. Samples were subjected to standard phenotypic identification of C.jejuni,... more
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      ZoonosesCampylobacter
Background and Aim: Milk is a highly perishable commodity, which is subjected to various types of contamination right from the farm level to the consumers' table. This study aimed to assess the quality of raw milk sold in and around... more
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      MicrobiologyVeterinary MicrobiologyPublic HealthZoonoses
Brucellosis is a disease that affects humans and different animal species, The affected people suffer from an acute or chronic illness (Samartino, 2006), The losses caused in the animal species are due to the loss of national and... more
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      BiotechnologyZoonoses
We excised surgically a feline granulomatous lesion and performed histopathological, mycological and molecular examinations. As a result, it was diagnosed as sporotrichosis, which was the second recorded case of a cat so afflicted in... more
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      ZoonosesCatsAntifungal AgentsItraconazole
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      Public HealthZoonosesAdolescentDisease Outbreaks
The island of Gran Canaria is a hyperendemic area for canine dirofilariasis. The aim of the present study was to provide data on Dirofilaria immitis in dogs, cats, and humans on this island in 2010. The data confirms the prevalence in the... more
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      MicrobiologyGeographyClimateZoonoses
Sporotrichosis is the most common subcutaneous mycosis in South America. Classic infection is associated with traumatic inoculation of soil, vegetables, and organic material contaminated with Sporothix schenckii. Animals of various... more
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      BrazilZoonosesCatsDisease Outbreaks
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    •   6  
      ZoonosesYellow feverIncidenceGenotype
Aim: The aim of the current investigation was to screen the presence of Staphylococci spp., especially S. aureus in meat, meat products of different animal species, and some seafood sold in some retail markets in Libya using cultural and... more
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      Meat ScienceFisheriesBiologyPublic Health
The zoophilic dermatophyte Microsporum canis has cats as natural reservoir, but it is able to infect a wide range of hosts, including humans, where different clinical features of the so-called ringworm dermatophytosis have been described.... more
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      Environmental microbiologyZoonosesCatsHair
Background and Aim: There is insufficient information about the successfully managed Lassa fever (LF) patients in Nigeria. This study aimed to utilize the One Health approach to identify the risk factors for LF infection among LF patients... more
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      MicrobiologyVeterinary MicrobiologyVirologyZoonoses
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    •   7  
      ZoonosesMultidisciplinaryDisease OutbreaksMassachusetts
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      Vector-Borne DiseaseZoonosesIsraelTicks
Evaluations of emerging zoonoses surveillance systems are rarely found in the published literature, making it difficult for decision-makers to choose the best surveillance initiatives.
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      ZoonosesSystematic reviewTransboundarySurveillance System
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      Environmental ScienceEpidemiologyEcologyCommunicable Diseases
The agouti-signaling protein (ASIP) plays a major role in mammalian pigmentation as an antagonist to melanocortin-1 receptor gene to stimulate pheomelanin synthesis, a major pigment conferring mammalian coat color. We sequenced a 352 bp... more
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    • Zoonoses
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      ZoonosesFood MicrobiologyCookingFood Contamination
The prevalence of orthopoxviruses (OPXV) among wildlife, including monkeypox virus (MPXV), remains largely unknown. Outbreaks of human monkeypox in central Africa have been associated with hunting, butchering, and consuming infected... more
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      ZoologyUgandaPublic HealthZoonoses
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      Tuberculosis and Infectious DiseasePublic HealthZoonosesBovine Tuberculosis
Background - Antibiotic use in human medicine, veterinary medicine, and agriculture has been linked to the rise of antibiotic resistance globally. We did a systematic review and meta-analysis to summarise the effect that interventions to... more
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      Meta-Analysis and Systematic ReviewPublic Health PolicyPublic HealthZoonoses
Monkeypox virus is a zoonotic orthopoxvirus (OPX) of west and central sub-Saharan Africa. We conducted a cross-sectional serosurvey in Likouala region, Republic of Congo to assess exposure to OPX. Whole blood was collected using Nobuto... more
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      ZoonosesMultivariate AnalysisCongoOdds ratio
Two subspecies of Trypanosoma brucei s.l. co-exist within the animal populations of Eastern Africa; T. b. brucei a parasite which only infects livestock and wildlife and T. b. rhodesiense a zoonotic parasite which infects domestic... more
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      MicrobiologyEpidemiologyZoonosesDNA
As of 2010 sub-Saharan Africa had approximately 865 million inhabitants living with numerous public health challenges. Several public health initiatives [e.g., the United States (US) President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief and the US... more
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      Program EvaluationVeterinary MedicineEpidemiologyLeadership
Background: Many human infections are transmitted through contact with animals (zoonoses), including household pets. Despite this concern, there is limited knowledge of the public's pet husbandry and infection control practices. The... more
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      ZoonosesAdolescentAnimal HusbandryDogs
We have previously shown that responses against a broad set of nine CD4 ؉ T-cell epitopes were present in the setting of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) Armstrong infection in the context of H-2 d . This is quite disparate to... more
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      MicrobiologyImmune responseAgingMedical Microbiology
Background and Aim: Bartonellosis is an emerging worldwide zoonosis caused by bacteria belonging to the genus Bartonella. Several studies have been conducted on the prevalence of Bartonella infections from animals and humans, including... more
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      MicrobiologyVeterinary MicrobiologyBacteriologyZoonoses
Background  Bali Province was affected by avian influenza H5N1 outbreaks in birds in October 2003. Despite ongoing circulation of the virus, no human infection had been identified by December 2005.Objectives  To assess behavioral patterns... more
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      IndonesiaZoonosesDisease OutbreaksAvian Influenza
Control and eradication of zoonoses is a priority because there can only be human health if there is animal health, and both will not exist if the environment is not healthy. This concept is called "One Health" Mexico has... more
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      BusinessGlobal HealthZoonosesMedicine
Background and Aim: In the course of our Indian Council of Medical Research project on coxiellosis in Puducherry and Tamil Nadu, 5.64% goat, 1.85% sheep, 1.06% buffaloes, and 0.97% cattle were positive for Coxiella burnetii antibodies by... more
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      Veterinary MicrobiologyVeterinary EpidemiologyZoonosesVeterinary public health
Q fever is a zoonotic disease caused by the ubiquitous pathogen Coxiella burnetii 24 responsible for acute and chronic clinical manifestations. Farm animals and pets are 25 the main reservoirs of infection, and transmission to human... more
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      MicrobiologyVeterinary MicrobiologyZoonosesQ Fever
Although well recognized and studied in developed countries, canine parasitic zoonoses pose a lowly prioritized public health problem in developing countries such as India, where conditions are conducive for transmission. A study of the... more
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      ParasitologyZoonosesIndiaBiological Sciences
crackles (OR = 5.17, p = 0.0016) and direct bilirubin levels (OR = 1.051, p = 0.04). Mortality was significantly higher in olig uric than nonoliguric (27 vs. 8%, p ! 0.001). Renal function at discharge was similar in oliguric and... more
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      Acute kidney injuryBrazilZoonosesAdolescent
In this article, we gathered information from postgraduate theses and scientific articles published in several databases using inclusion criteria that had been made in Latin America, in countries with similar economic conditions, and also... more
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      Veterinary MedicineAnimal WelfarePublic HealthZoonoses
Brucellosis is a zoonotic bacterial infection that can be acquired by humans from infected animals' meat, urine, body fluids, aborted materials, unpasteurized milk, and milk products or contaminated environment. Mathematical models for... more
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      Mathematical ModellingZoonosesBrucellosisControl Strategies
ABSTRACT. Neotropical Felidae as hosts of zoonotic agents in Brazil. Mammals play a central role in the cycle of several zoonoses, the study of their prevalence and distribution is extremely important to prevent outbreaks and create... more
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      ZoonosesParasitic Zoonoses
Background and Aim: Q fever is a zoonotic disease caused by Coxiella burnetii. Cattle, sheep, and goat are the main reservoir of C. burnetii. In Egypt, the epidemiological data about C. burnetii in camels are limited. Therefore, the... more
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      MicrobiologyVeterinary MicrobiologyBiological WeaponsZoonoses
First we remind general considerations concerning biodiversity on earth and particularly the loss of genetic biodiversity that seems irreversible whether its origin is directly or indirectly linked to human activities. Urgent and... more
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      BreedingBiodiversityZoonosesMultidisciplinary
Uncontrolled population of stray and domicile dogs with intestinal protozoan in close proximity to increasing densities of human population in urban environments is a common fact in developing countries, in conjunction with the lack of... more
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      ZoonosesCryptosporidium
This article examines the impact of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) on dog-mediated rabies, a neglected tropical disease that remains endemic in >65 countries. A globally agreed strategy for rabies elimination is underpinned by a One... more
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      ZoonosesNeglected tropical diseasesRabiesOne Health
Background Hunting and butchering of wild non-human primates infected with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) is thought to have sparked the HIV pandemic. Although SIV and other primate retroviruses infect laboratory workers and zoo... more
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      CameroonZoonosesPrimatesPapio
In this article, we gathered information from postgraduate theses and scientific articles published in several databases using inclusion criteria that had been made in Latin America, in countries with similar economic conditions, and also... more
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      Veterinary MedicineAnimal WelfarePublic HealthZoonoses
Rabies viruses belong to the genus Lyssavirus in the family Rhabdoviridae. 1 The root of the genus name is attributed to the Greek goddess Lyssa, the spirit of rage, frenzy, madness, and rabies 2 ; the word rabies itself is derived from... more
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      ZoonosesExposure AssessmentRabiesRisk factors
Plasmodium falciparum is the most prevalent and lethal of the malaria parasites infecting humans, yet the origin and evolutionary history of this important pathogen remain controversial. Here we develop a single-genome amplification... more
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      AfricaMolecular EvolutionMedical MicrobiologyMalaria
Taenia solium taeniasis/cysticercosis is a zoonotic disease endemic in sub-Saharan Africa. It is associated with poor sanitary practices, free-range pig husbandry and lack of disease awareness in endemic communities. A comparative... more
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      MicrobiologyAssessmentControlEvaluation
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      Bovine MastitisZoonosesTanzaniaAnimal Husbandry