Academic literature on the topic 'Vaccination/inoculation'

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Journal articles on the topic "Vaccination/inoculation"

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Boylston, Arthur. "The origins of vaccination: no inoculation, no vaccination." Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 106, no. 10 (2013): 395–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0141076813499293.

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Shah, Shagun Bhatia, Rajiv Chawla, and Anurag Mehta. "SARS-CoV-2: Comparison of Active Immunity Acquired by Natural Exposure versus Inoculation of HCW." Galore International Journal of Health Sciences and Research 6, no. 2 (2021): 54–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.52403/gijhsr.20210408.

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Background: The immune response to vaccination is not expected to be the same in COVID-19 survivors and COVID-naïve population. There is a deficiency of specific guidelines regarding vaccination (number and temporal spacing of doses) for the burgeoning subset of population which has recovered from COVID-19 due to paucity of literature. Methodology: This prospective, observational, single-centric, case-control study compares the IgG-antibody count at two time-points (post first and second inoculation) in 33 COVID-survivors Group-P) and 31 COVID-naïve (Group-N) health care workers. Adverse event
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Eldaghayes, Ibrahim, Lisa Rothwell, Michael Skinner, and Pete Kaiser. "Fowlpox virus in chicken’s skin: Persistence and the local immune response at the site of inoculation." Journal of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases 14, no. 3 (2024): 131. http://dx.doi.org/10.5455/jmid.2024.v14.i3.6.

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Background: Fowlpox virus (FPV) has been used as a vector for many years. To date, surprisingly, very little data exist on the persistence of fowlpox vaccines in chicken tissues, or what kind of immune cells respond to vaccination at the site of inoculation. Although both humoral and cellular- mediated immunity (CMI) play a part in overall immunity against FPV, little is known regarding the cell-mediated immune responses to FPV infection. Aim: The main aim of this paper was to measure persistence of fowlpox vaccine in skin tissues following vaccination. Methods: One-day-old chicks were vaccina
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Baek, Kyeongbin, Sony Maharjan, Madhav Akauliya, et al. "Comparison of vaccination efficacy using live or ultraviolet-inactivated influenza viruses introduced by different routes in a mouse model." PLOS ONE 17, no. 10 (2022): e0275722. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0275722.

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Influenza is a major cause of highly contagious respiratory illness resulting in high mortality and morbidity worldwide. Annual vaccination is an effective way to prevent infection and complication from constantly mutating influenza strains. Vaccination utilizes preemptive inoculation with live virus, live attenuated virus, inactivated virus, or virus segments for optimal immune activation. The route of administration also affects the efficacy of the vaccination. Here, we evaluated the effects of inoculation with ultraviolet (UV)-inactivated or live influenza A virus strains and compared their
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Compton, Josh, and Brian Kaylor. "“The Devil and Vaccination” and Inoculation Theory." Journal of Communication and Religion 45, no. 3 (2022): 37–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/jcr20224539.

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“The Devil and Vaccination,” a satirical take on Samuel Coleridge and Robert Southey’s poem, “The Devil’s Thoughts,” appeared in the July 1879 issue of The Vaccination Inquirer and Health Review—a publication that published vaccine-skeptical writings. The poem told the story of the Devil visiting a prison, encountering several people including a father imprisoned for refusing to have one of his children vaccinated. In the present rhetorical analysis, “The Devil and Vaccination” was viewed through the lens of inoculation theory—a theory more commonly used to guide a social scientific approach t
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Abd El-Ghany, Wafaa A. "In Ovo Vaccination Technology: An Alternative Approach to Post-Hatch Vaccination in Modern Poultry Operations." Microbiology Research 16, no. 1 (2024): 7. https://doi.org/10.3390/microbiolres16010007.

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Poultry production systems are usually exposed to important infections that could be prevented by vaccination programs. Conventional methods of vaccination such as drinking water; spray, eye, or nose inoculation; and injection are usually given after hatching and have many disadvantages. Therefore, there is a great need for searching of alternative ways for vaccination process. In ovo vaccination technology is now regarded as an alternative approach to post-hatch vaccination in modern poultry operations. This technique is effective, fast, provides uniform vaccine dosing and delivery, is suitab
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ELMEDULAN, ARNIELYN, and MERASOL DUYAG. "CONTEXTUAL FACTORS, VACCINATION DETERMINANTS, AND ADHERENCE TO COVID-19 INOCULATION AMONG PREGNANT WOMEN." Sprin Journal of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences 3, no. 3 (2024): 05–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.55559/sjahss.v3i3.260.

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Background: Maternal inoculation is the most effective way to combat COVID-19, reducing morbidity in pregnant women and newborns. This study focused on investigating the factors influencing COVID-19 inoculation adherence among pregnant women in a government hospital in Paranaque City, Philippines. Research Method: Conducted through a descriptive-correlational research design involving 245 randomly selected pregnant women, the study employed three researcher-made questionnaires to gather data on contextual factors, vaccination determinants, and adherence to COVID-19 inoculation. Results: The fi
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Lan, Zheng, Tongli Zhang, Yu Zhang, et al. "A curated collection of transcriptome datasets to study the transcriptional response in blood and nasal samples following viral respiratory inoculation and vaccination." F1000Research 14 (May 13, 2025): 493. https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.162267.1.

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Background Our understanding of the human immune system’s response to viral respiratory tract infections (VRTIs) and vaccines, including the molecular mechanisms and correlates of protection, remains incomplete. Extensive transcriptomic data from inoculation and vaccination studies have been deposited in publicly available databases. However, these studies are often separate and difficult to locate. Methods To bridge this research gap, we have systematically searched and reviewed publicly available datasets from NCBI Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO), Archive of Functional Genomics Data (ArrayExpr
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Jo, Jeong-Eun. "The Endeavors for Universal Vaccinationand Their Impact: Focusing on Smallpox Epidemic in Shanghai, 1938-39." Korean Association for the Social History of Medicine 11 (April 30, 2023): 63–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.32365/kashm.2023.11.3.

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In this paper, we investigated what kind of efforts were made to expand vaccination amid a smallpox epidemic in Shanghai in 1938-39, as well as the significance of such efforts.
 In Shanghai, various strategies were employed to achieve universal vaccination. When it was first introduced, theories of Chinese medicine were borrowed to help people’s understanding, and various media outlets were used to promote the effect and safety of vaccination. Health institutions in the foreign concession and the Chinese elites helped to expand free vaccination. At the time, vaccination was not mandatory
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Ramirez, A. G., C. Despres, P. Chalela, et al. "Pilot study of peer modeling with psychological inoculation to promote coronavirus vaccination." Health Education Research 37, no. 1 (2022): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/her/cyab042.

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Abstract Promoting coronavirus vaccination is deterred by misinformation, ranging from elaborate conspiracy theories about sinister purposes to exaggeration of side effects, largely promulgated by social media. In this pilot study, we tested the effects of different messages on actions leading to vaccination. Two theory-based advertisements were produced for Facebook, which provided video testimonials from peer role models recommending vaccination and its benefits while providing psychological inoculation through the models’ acknowledging misinformation, rejecting it and receiving the vaccine.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Vaccination/inoculation"

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Park, SangHee. "Inoculation Information Against Contagious Disease Misperception about Flu with Heuristic vs. Systematic Information and Expert vs. Non-Expert Source." Bowling Green State University / OhioLINK, 2015. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1446827113.

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Sköld, Peter. "The two faces of smallpox : a disease and its prevention in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Sweden." Doctoral thesis, Umeå universitet, Demografiska databasen, 1996. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-55842.

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This study deals with the history of smallpox in Sweden between 1750 and 1900 and the two preventive measures that were used against it: inoculation during the eighteenth and vaccination during the nineteenth Century. Between 1750 and 1800 300,000 children died from smallpox in Sweden. During the nineteenth Century smallpox death rates decreased considerably and by the end of the Century the disease was very rare. The purpose of this study has been to examine the occurrence of smallpox at local, regional and national levels and to explain the changes in the light of general models of the epide
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Peritore, Nicole Rachael. "FACTORS RELATING TO HPV BEHAVIORS OF FEMALE COLLEGE STUDENTS." UKnowledge, 2012. http://uknowledge.uky.edu/khp_etds/2.

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This study examined the knowledge, sources of information, reasons for and against Gardasil® uptake, and possible relationships between unhealthy behaviors and vaccination for undergraduate college females at a public university. Utilizing an online survey, 2400 random students were emailed as well as recruited through online classes. The final sample size was 516 females. The study determined how many participants had been vaccinated and their rationale for or against vaccination. The majority of study participants were knowledgeable about HPV and Gardasil®. The primary sources of information
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Chao, Kuan ya, and 趙冠雅. "The Study on the Factors for H1N1 Influenza Vaccination Inoculation of Hospital Employee." Thesis, 2011. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/73083235197288724467.

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碩士<br>靜宜大學<br>管理碩士在職專班<br>99<br>In an arm to explore vaccination rate of seasonal flu and H1N1 flu and related factors affecting vaccination during 2009 flu pandemic, we conduct the study in one teaching hospital in Central Taiwan. We collected 221 questionnaires among 359 subjects, responsive rate was 61.55%. 3 questionnaires failed to be filled validly, so valid questionnaires was 218, which means validly responsively rate was 60.72%. The rate of respondent which took seasonal flu vaccine was 61.6%. The reasons for not taking seasonal flu were “concerning about side effect” (8.6%); “being
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Books on the topic "Vaccination/inoculation"

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Adami, J. George. The centenary of vaccination, May 14, 1796. s.n., 1986.

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Québec (Province). Central Board of Health., ed. La Variole: Moyens de s'en préserver. s.n., 1986.

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Naono, Atsuko. State of vaccination: The fight against smallpox in colonial Burma. Orient Blackswan, 2009.

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Naono, Atsuko. State of vaccination: The fight against smallpox in colonial Burma. Orient Blackswan, 2009.

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World Health Organization (WHO). Report of WHO consultation on oral immunization of dogs against rabies, Geneva, 26-27 February, 1988. World Helath Organization, 1988.

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World Health Organization (WHO). Third WHO consultation on oral immunization of dogs against rabies, Geneva, 21-22 July, 1992. World Helath Organization, 1992.

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World Health Organization (WHO). Second WHO consultation on oral immunization of dogs against rabies, Geneva, 6th July, 1990. World Helath Organization, 1991.

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1943-, Liew F. Y., ed. Vaccination strategies of tropical diseases. CRC Press, 1989.

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Organization, World Health. Report of WHO informal meeting on oral/conjunctival brucellosis strain 2 vaccine, Nouzilly, France, 8-9February, 1989. World health Organization, 1989.

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World Health Organization (WHO). Report of WHO informal consultation on oral/conjunctival brucellosis strain 2 vaccine, Geneva, 2-4 April, 1990. World health Organization, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Vaccination/inoculation"

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Wang, B., A. P. Godillot, M. P. Madaio, D. B. Weiner, and W. V. Williams. "Vaccination Against Pathogenic Cells by DNA Inoculation." In Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-80475-5_2.

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Torre, Jose R. "Benjamin Waterhouse, Kine Pox Inoculation, Rules to be Attended to during Vaccination (Cambridge, MA, 1809)." In The Enlightenment in America, 1720-1825 Vol 4. Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003551676-15.

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Toye, Philip, Henry Kiara, Onesmo ole-MoiYoi, Dolapo Enahoro, and Karl M. Rich. "The management and economics of east coast fever." In The impact of the International Livestock Research Institute. CABI, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/9781789241853.0239.

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Abstract This book chapter tackles the management and economics of east coast fever. At about the time of ILRAD's establishment in 1973, a vaccination procedure was being developed at the East African Veterinary Research Organization (EAVRO) at Muguga, Kenya. The infection-and-treatment method (ITM) is an immunization procedure against ECF. It involves inoculation of live sporozoites of T. parva, usually in the form of a semi-purified homogenate of T. parva-infected ticks, combined with simultaneous treatment with a dose of a long-acting formulation of the antibiotic oxytetracycline. Whilst sa
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Heifferon, Barbara. "Contextualizing the Smallpox Inoculation of 1721–1722." In America’s First Vaccination. Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003312369-2.

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Weightman, Gavin. "The Battle for Vaccination." In The Great Inoculator. Yale University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300241440.003.0016.

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This chapter examines how the worldwide excitement for Edward Jenner's vaccine in the first flush of Cowmania promised a new era in which parents would clamour to have their children protected by this new and safe form of inoculation. This would have realised the dream of John Haygarth, who had imagined a national scheme and dismissed it on the grounds that it was unenforceable. But vaccination was not greeted with the enthusiasm that might have been anticipated. In the first decade of the nineteenth century, vaccination was favoured over inoculation by Parliament and by a majority of the medi
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Tizard, Ian R. "Anti-inoculation and anti-vaccination riots." In A History of Vaccines and their Opponents. Elsevier, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-443-13434-0.00006-1.

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Weightman, Gavin. "Jenner’s Debt to Sutton." In The Great Inoculator. Yale University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300241440.003.0015.

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This chapter assesses whether Edward Jenner would have discovered the protective power of cowpox even if there had been no inoculation before vaccination. In his account of how he made his discovery, Jenner attributes it directly to his experiences as an inoculator. All the histories Jenner presented to support his case for vaccine inoculation could not have been performed without Suttonian inoculation. And when Jenner came to attempt his first practical experiment with the vaccine, he was already an experienced Suttonian inoculator. He believed the key to Sutton's success was the manner of in
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Weightman, Gavin. "Sutton and Jenner." In The Great Inoculator. Yale University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300241440.003.0017.

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This chapter looks at how Daniel Sutton died forgotten at the age of eighty-three on February 3, 1819. There was no institution to carry Sutton's name into the era of vaccination; his family was scattered and none had any connection with medicine. There is not a single Sutton memorial in London or anywhere in the country, or, as far as is known, in the rest of the world. His importance in the defeat of smallpox would not be acknowledged even now if it were not for the interest historians have taken in eighteenth-century medicine in recent years. There was certainly contemporary support for the
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Midgley, Rachel. "An introduction to the immune system and cancer." In Cancer biotherapy. Oxford University PressOxford, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198566311.003.0003.

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Abstract Immunology as a science celebrated its bicentenary just before the dawn of the new millennium. In 1796 Jenner reported his finding that inoculation of a young man, James Phipps, with pus obtained from a cowpox lesion (or vaccinia from the latin term ‘vacca’ meaning cow) resulted in protection against human smallpox, a frequently fatal disease. This was the first documented evidence for the effectiveness of ‘vaccination’. Despite Jenner’s firm evidence, the resistance of the Church to his methods meant that smallpox vaccination did not become routine until the twentieth century.
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Weightman, Gavin. "Cowmania!" In The Great Inoculator. Yale University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300241440.003.0014.

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This chapter discusses how vaccination was to conquer the world in a very short space of time, despite the fact that the research on which it was based was very limited and, in some vital respects, faulty. Edward Jenner was ingenious and imaginative but he was not meticulous. This very soon became apparent as experiments were made with the vaccine. There was one great problem when experiments with the effectiveness of cowpox vaccine were begun in earnest in many parts of the world: where to get the necessary infective matter. Ultimately, 'Cowmania' was a wild, worldwide clamour for a medical i
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Conference papers on the topic "Vaccination/inoculation"

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Konyakhina, Yu V., A. A. Sergeev, K. A. Titova, S. A. Pyankov, S. N. Yakubitskiy, and S. N. Shchelkunov. "LOW-DOSE SMALLPOX VACCINATION IN A MOUSE MODEL." In X Международная конференция молодых ученых: биоинформатиков, биотехнологов, биофизиков, вирусологов и молекулярных биологов — 2023. Novosibirsk State University, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/978-5-4437-1526-1-254.

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Vaccinia virus (VACV) strains caused a more pronounced production of antibodies with intradermal (i.d.) injection compared to scarification (s.s.) inoculation. To test for developed protective immunity at 62 day post vaccination (dpv), mice were intranasally infected with a cowpox virus. The results showed that i.d. injection provided the development of protective immunity in mice to a much greater extent compared to s.s. inoculation with VACV strains.
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Крывошея, П. Ю., and О. Г. Рудь. "IMMUNOLOGICAL EFFICIENCY OF INACTIVATED VACCINES “FLUEQUIN” FOR THE PREVENTION OF INFLUENZA OF HORSES." In СОВРЕМЕННЫЕ ДОСТИЖЕНИЯ И АКТУАЛЬНЫЕ ПРОБЛЕМЫ В КОНЕВОДСТВЕ. Crossref, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.25727/hs.2019.1.35382.

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Изложены результаты проверки иммуногенных свойств гриппозной вакцины «Флюэквин» путем определения концентрации антигемагглютинирующих антител против вируса гриппа в разные сроки после прививки. Исследовано 120 сывороток крови лошадей украинской верховой породы до прививки гриппозной вакциной и после ее проведения в разные периоды. Титр антител до вакцинации был в среднем 1:6,0±4,81, а через месяц после вакцинации возрос до 1:586,67±344,44, через пять месяцев он составил 1:60,09±40,91. Изучены особенности иммунологического ответа на гриппозную прививку у возрастных группах лошадей. Установлено,
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ROCHA, Sofia Marques, Bruna Hudson Neves PEREIRA, Emanuelle Silva OLIVEIRA, Letícia Santos JUNQUEIRA, and Glenda Ribeiro OLIVEIRA. "RELEVANCE OF THE HEALTH CONDITION AND CLINICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF SPOROTRICHOSIS." In SOUTHERN BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY 2021 INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL CONFERENCE. DR. D. SCIENTIFIC CONSULTING, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.48141/sbjchem.21scon.41_abstract_rocha.pdf.

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Feline sporotrichosis is a zoonosis caused by S. brasiliensis, and it presents a degree of great underreporting due to its contamination. Caused by inoculation directly into the skin, in most cases through scratches or bites by infected animals. With its first diagnosis in 1907 among naturally infected mice. The study presents information on the health of the animal, composed of 24 felines of both sexes, obtaining information through questionnaires about food along with vaccination, deworming, and ectoparasites control. In addition to depicting the types of injuries and body parts such as head
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Reports on the topic "Vaccination/inoculation"

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Schat, Karel Antoni, Irit Davidson, and Dan Heller. Chicken infectious anemia virus: immunosuppression, transmission and impact on other diseases. United States Department of Agriculture, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.32747/2008.7695591.bard.

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1. Original Objectives. The original broad objectives of the grant were to determine A) the impact of CAV on the generation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) to reticuloendotheliosis virus (REV) (CU), B). the interactions between chicken anemia virus (CAV) and Marek’s disease virus (MDV) with an emphasis on horizontal spread of CAV through feathers (KVI), and C) the impact of CAV infection on Salmonella typhimurium (STM) (HUJI). During the third year and the one year no cost extension the CU group included some work on the development of an antigen-antibody complex vaccine for CAV, which was pa
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DeMartini, James C., Abraham Yaniv, Jonathan O. Carlson, et al. Evaluation of Naked Proviral DNA as a Vaccine for Ovine Lentivirus Infection. United States Department of Agriculture, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.32747/1994.7570553.bard.

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Ovine lentivirus (OvLV) infection is widespread in sheep of the United States and Israel and is responsible for substantial economic losses. The primary goal of this project was to evaluate naked proviral DNA as a vaccine to induce protective immunity in sheep in endemic areas. Contrary to expectations, inoculation of sheep with proviral DNA derived from the full length OvLV molecular clone pkv72 did not result in detectable OvLV infection, but infectious virus was recovered from transfected ovine cells. Kv72 virus produced by these cells infected sheep and induced antibody responses, and was
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