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Meningoencephalitis and other conditions associated with <i>Histophilus ovis</i> infection in sheep
21
Citations
17
References
1991
Year
CaprineFertilityPathologyVeterinary MicrobiologyH Ovis InfectionHistophilus OvisInfection ControlPublic HealthParasitologyAnimal PhysiologyVeterinary PathologyAnimal ScienceZoonotic DiseasePathogenesisAnimal HealthVeterinary ScienceArtificial InseminationOther ConditionsMedicine
Histophilus ovis was isolated from 29 sheep in 20 flocks and 2 artificial insemination (AI) centres in southern New South Wales from 1984 to 1990. The clinical and pathological findings were consistent with previous reports and included polyarthritis (7 flocks), epididymo-orchitis (5), meningoencephalitis (3), pneumonia (3), septicaemia (2), mastitis (1) and metritis (1). Six sheep had meningoencephalitis, a syndrome not previously associated with H ovis infection in sheep, which was similar pathologically to thromboembolic meningoencephalitis in cattle, caused by the related organism, Haemophilus somnus. H ovis was isolated from the semen of 12-month-old rams in a flock that had polyarthritis due to H ovis, in 4-month-old ram lambs and from the uterus of a ewe in a flock that had sporadic cases of H ovis septicaemia.
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