Publication | Closed Access
Pasteurella haemolytica of cattle: serotype, production of beta-galactosidase and antibacterial sensitivity.
17
Citations
8
References
1971
Year
Shipping FeverAnimal SciencePathogenesisAntibacterial SensitivityVeterinary SciencePathologyNasal CavityEducationLivestock HealthAnimal HealthVeterinary MicrobiologyMicrobiologyInfection ControlAnimal Disease PreventionMedicinePasteurella HaemolyticaAntimicrobial Resistance
Two hundred and three isolates of Pasteurella haemolytica from cattle were studied. They originated from the nasal cavity of cattle in housed herds; the nasal cavity and pneumonic lungs of experimental feedlot calves and from pneumonic bovine lungs submitted for bacteriological diagnosis.To determine whether a single characteristic or combination of characteristics might be a feature of isolates collected from animals with pneumonic pasteurellosis (Shipping Fever), the following tests were made. Cultures were serotyped by indirect haemagglutination; the ability to produce beta-galactosidase was examined in the ortho-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside (ONPG) test and antibacterial sensitivity tests were done. None of these factors could be directly related to the role of P. haemolytica in "Shipping Fever".
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