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Peste Des Petits Ruminants in Africa: Meta-Analysis of the Virus Isolation in Molecular Epidemiology Studies
Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research ISSN: (Online) 2219-0635, (Print) 0030-2465 Page 1 of 15 Review Article Peste des petits ruminants in Africa: Meta-analysis of the virus isolation in molecular epidemiology studies Authors: Peste des petits ruminant (PPR) is a highly contagious, infectious viral disease of small 1,2 Samuel E. Mantip ruminant species which is caused by the peste des petits ruminants virus (PPRV), the David Shamaki2 Souabou Farougou1 prototype member of the Morbillivirus genus in the Paramyxoviridae family. Peste des petits ruminant was first described in West Africa, where it has probably been endemic in sheep and Affiliations: goats since the emergence of the rinderpest pandemic and was always misdiagnosed with 1 Department of Animal rinderpest in sheep and goats. Since its discovery PPR has had a major impact on sheep and Health and Production, University of Abomey-Calavi, goat breeders in Africa and has therefore been a key focus of research at the veterinary Abomey Calavi, Benin research institutes and university faculties of veterinary medicine in Africa. Several key discoveries were made at these institutions, including the isolation and propagation of African 2Viral Research Division, PPR virus isolates, notable amongst which was the Nigerian PPRV 75/1 that was used in the National Veterinary Research scientific study to understand the taxonomy, molecular dynamics, lineage differentiation of Institute, Vom, Nigeria PPRV and the development of vaccine seeds for immunisation against PPR. African sheep and Corresponding author: goat breeds including camels and wild ruminants are frequently infected, manifesting clinical Samuel E. Mantip, signs of the disease, whereas cattle and pigs are asymptomatic but can seroconvert for PPR. -
Bulgaria Stops the Spread of Animal Disease with the Help of the IAEA and FAO by Laura Gil
Infectious Diseases Bulgaria stops the spread of animal disease with the help of the IAEA and FAO By Laura Gil Bulgarian authorities at a n 2018, Bulgaria halted the spread of peste Although not transmittable to humans, local farm carrying out des petits ruminants (PPR) — a disease PPR can have a severe impact on livestock, their disease control work. Ithat can devastate livestock — thanks in part killing between 50 and 80% of infected (Photo: S. Slavchev/IAEA) to the support of the IAEA and the Food animals, mostly sheep and goats. Its high and Agriculture Organization of the United economic impact makes PPR one of the Nations (FAO). This was the first time PPR most significant livestock diseases. Also had been recorded in the European Union, known as ovine rinderpest or sheep and which made halting its spread early an goat plague, PPR originated in Africa but important goal for the region. has also been reported in Asia and the Middle East. Summer outbreak “Most European laboratories are generally In the summer of 2018, cattle breeders on neither familiar with nor prepared to deal the farms of Voden in south-eastern Bulgaria with this disease,” said Giovanni Cattoli, noticed that their animals were suffering from Head of the Animal Production and Health a disease. Soon after, authorities reported that Laboratory at the Joint FAO/IAEA Division the country was facing an outbreak of PPR. of Nuclear Techniques for Food and Within days, two Bulgarian scientists came to Agriculture. “It is exotic, off their radar. But, the IAEA to receive training and materials to luckily, Bulgaria reacted quickly, and we rapidly detect and characterize the PPR virus stepped up to support them.” using nuclear-derived techniques. -
Emergence and Evolution of a Prevalent New SARS-Cov-2 Variant in the United States
bioRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.01.11.426287; this version posted January 19, 2021. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under aCC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license. Emergence and Evolution of a Prevalent New SARS-CoV-2 Variant in the United States Adrian A. Pater1, Michael S. Bosmeny2,†, Christopher L. Barkau2,†, Katy N. Ovington2, 5 Ramadevi Chilamkurthy2, Mansi Parasrampuria2, Seth B. Eddington2, Abadat O. Yinusa1, Adam A. White2, Paige E. Metz2, Rourke J. Sylvain2, Madison M. Hebert1, Scott W. Benzinger1, Koushik Sinha3, and Keith T. Gagnon1,2,* 1Southern Illinois University, Chemistry and Biochemistry, Carbondale, Illinois, USA, 62901. 2Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 10 Carbondale, Illinois, USA, 62901. 3Southern Illinois University School of Computing, Carbondale, Illinois, USA, 62901. *Correspondence to: [email protected]. †Equally contributing authors. 15 Abstract Genomic surveillance can lead to early identification of novel viral variants and inform pandemic response. Using this approach, we identified a new variant of the SARS-CoV-2 virus that emerged in the United States (U.S.). The earliest sequenced genomes of this variant, referred to as 20C-US, can be traced to Texas in late May of 2020. This variant circulated in the U.S. 20 uncharacterized for months and rose to recent prevalence during the third pandemic wave. It initially acquired five novel, relatively unique non-synonymous mutations. 20C-US is continuing to acquire multiple new mutations, including three independently occurring spike protein mutations. -
Assessment of Oxidative Stress in Peste Des Petits Ruminants (Ovine Rinderpest) Affected Goats
Media Peternakan, December 2012, pp. 170-174 Online version: ISSN 0126-0472 EISSN 2087-4634 http://medpet.journal.ipb.ac.id/ Accredited by DGHE No: 66b/DIKTI/Kep/2011 DOI: 10.5398/medpet.2012.35.3.170 Assessment of Oxidative Stress in Peste des petits ruminants (Ovine rinderpest) Affected Goats A. K. Kataria* & N. Kataria Apex Centre for Animal Disease Investigation, Monitoring and Surveillance College of Veterinary and Animal Science, Rajasthan University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, Bikaner – 334 001, Rajasthan, India (Received 28-06-2012; Reviewed 03-08-2012; Accepted 30-08-2012) ABSTRACT The aim of the present investigation was to evaluate oxidative stress in goats affected with peste des petits ruminants (PPR). The experiment was designed to collect blood samples from PPR affected as well as healthy goats during a series of PPR outbreaks which occurred during February to April 2012 in different districts of Rajasthan state (India). Out of total 202 goats of various age groups and of both the sexes, 155 goats were PPR affected and 47 were healthy. Oxidative stress was evaluated by determining various serum biomarkers viz. vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin E, glutathione, cata- lase, superoxide dismutase, glutathione reductase and xanthine oxidase, the mean values of which were 1.71±0.09 µmol L-1, 13.02±0.14 µmol L-1, 2.22±0.09 µmol L-1, 3.03±0.07 µmol L-1, 135.12±8.10 kU L-1, 289.13±8.00 kU L-1, 6.11± 0.06 kU L-1 and 98.12±3.12 mU L-1, respectively. -
London's Swine Flu Pandemic
Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust Executive Office Tel: 020 3214 5760 Fax: 020 3214 5761 4 February 2010 Sarah Hurcombe Assistant Scrutiny Manager Post Point 10 City Hall The Queen's Walk London SE1 2AA Dear Ms Hurcombe, I am responding to your request for feedback in relation to London's response to Swine Flu. !asked my Director of Nursing Practice, who is our Infection Control lead, to consider the questions you asked and he has provided me with the following comments: 1. Communication was a bit of an issue at first but this improved rapidly in time. I generally found that staff at NHS London were doing their best to advise where they could. Teleconferencing was a big help and saved a lot of travel time. One final point is that there wasn't any panic at any time when it was declared to be a pandemic. 2. At some of the meetings members of NHS London could become rather defensive to constructive comments. They appeared to take these as personal attacks. A more open debate on the challenges we were all facing would have been helpful. I hope that the above comments are useful. We look forward to viewing others views and feedback when published on your web-site. Yours sincerely, Claire Murdoch Chief Executive Trust Headquarters, Greater London House, Hampstead Road, London NWl 7QY Tel: 020 3214 5700 Fax: 020 3214 5701 www.cnwi.nhs.uk Dear Sarah, Further to the letter from James Cleverly, Chair of Health and Public Services Committee, and in answer to the questions posed: The Ealing Hospital NHS Trust has yet to complete its local debrief, but in general we believe we responded well to the challenge. -
Employee Education Tool
An Important Update from the Infection Prevention Team Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) as of 4/21/20 SPHINX HHC is committed to providing home health care services with the highest professional, ethical, and safety standards. Part of this commitment is providing you, our employees, with education to keep you safe. Please review the frequently asked questions and answers below to equip yourself with correct, current information about the virus to protect you and your loved ones, while ensuring we continue to put our clients first. What is Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19)? • It is a new Coronavirus that was originally detected in Wuhan, China, that has become a global pandemic of respiratory disease spreading from person-to-person. This situation poses a serious public health risk. The federal government is working closely with state, local, tribal, and territorial partners, as well as public health partners, to respond to this situation. COVID-19 can cause mild to severe illness; most severe illness occurs in older adults. How is COVID-19 spread? COVID-19 is thought to spread mainly from person-to-person. Person-to-person spread means: • Between people who are in close contact with one another (within about 6 feet) • From respiratory droplets produced when an infected person coughs or sneezes. These droplets can possibly land in the mouths or noses of people who are nearby, be inhaled into the lungs, or land on surfaces that people touch. What are the symptoms of Coronavirus? There are a wide range of symptoms of COVID-19 reported, ranging from mild symptoms to severe illness: • Fever • Cough • Shortness of breath or difficulty breathing • Chills • Repeated shaking with chills • Muscle pain • Headache • Sore throat • New onset of loss of taste or smell www.sphinxhomecare.com How soon after exposure to COVID-19 do signs and symptoms occur? • Symptoms occur anywhere from 2 to 14 days after exposure to the virus. -
Ukraine of Live Animals, Their Reproductive Material, Food Products of Animal Origin and Products Not Intended for Human Consumption
2 MINISTRY OF AGRARIAN POLICY AND FOOD OF UKRAINE EXECUTIVE ORDER ______________________ Kyiv No. ______ On approving the Requirements for importing (sending) into the customs territory of Ukraine of live animals, their reproductive material, food products of animal origin and products not intended for human consumption. In execution of Articles 3 and 30 of the Law of Ukraine "On Veterinary Medicine," Article 15 of the Law of Ukraine "On Main Principles and Requirements to Safety and Quality of Food Products," Articles 3, 4, 6 and 8 of the WTO Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures, Articles 59, 64 and 65 of the Association Agreement between Ukraine, on the one hand, and the European Union, the European Atomic Energy Community and their Member States, on the other hand, paragraph 34 of the Action Plan for implementation of Title IV “Trade and Trade Related Matters” of the Association Agreement between Ukraine, on the one hand, and the European Union, the European Atomic Energy Community and their Member States, on the other hand for 2016-2019 approved by Resolution of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine of 18 February 2016 No. 217-r , subparagraph 2 of paragraph 4 of the Regulation on the Ministry of Agrarian Policy and Food of Ukraine approved by Resolution of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine of 25 November 2015 No. 1119 I HEREBY ORDER: 1. To approve the Requirements for importing (sending) into the customs territory of Ukraine of live animals, their reproductive material, food products of animal origin and products 3 not intended for human consumption. -
Prevelance of Peste Des Petits Ruminants Virus In
PREVELANCE OF PESTE DES PETITS RUMINANTS VIRUS IN THE BLUE NILE STATE By Raja Eltahir Haj Omer B.V.Sc. (1996) University of Khartoum Supervisor Professor Abdel Rahim El Sayed Karrar co-Supervisor Dr. Yahia Hassan Ali A thesis submitted to the University of Khartoum in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Veterinary Medicine (M.V.M) Department of Medicine, Toxicology and Pharmacology Faculty of Veterinary Medicine University of Khartoum 2011 ﺑﺴــﻢ اﷲ اﻟﺮﺣـﻤـﻦ اﻟﺮﺣـﻴﻢ ﻗﺎل ﺗﻌﺎﻟﻰ: (ﺳـﺒﺤـﺎن اﻟﺬي ﺳـﺨﺮ ﻟﻨﺎ هﺬا وﻣﺎ آـﻨﺎ ﻟﻪ ﻣـﻘﺮﻧﲔ) ﺻﺪق اﷲ اﻟﻌﻈﻴﻢ ﺳﻮرة اﻟﺰﺧﺮف - ﺁﻳﺔ (13) LIST OF CONTENTS Page Dedication…………………………………………………………… ix Acknowledgements…………………………………………………. iix English Summary…………………………………………………….. x Arabic summary ……………………………………………………. xi List of Contents……………………………………………………… i List of Tables ……………………………………………………….. vi List of Figures………………………………………………………. vii Introduction…………………………………………………………….. 1 iii Page CHAPTER ONE: LITERATURE REVIEW 1.1. Definition………………………………………………………………. 4 1.2. Etiology………………………………………………………………… 5 1.2.1. Virus structure…………………………………………………………... 5 1.2.2. Relationship between the PPR virus and rinderpest virus………………. 6 1.3. Host Range and species variation………………………………………… 6 1.4. Historical Background……………………………………………………. 7 1.5. Epidemiology of PPR…………………………………………………… 9 1.5.1 Geographical Distribution…………………………………………….. 9 1.5.2. Transmission…………………………………………………………….. 10 1.5.3. Lineages of PPRV……………………………………………………… 11 1.5.4. Morbidity and Mortality……………………………………………… 12 1.6 Pathology………………………………………………………………… 13 1.6.1 Gross lesions…………………………………………………………… 13 1.6.2 Microscopic lesions (histopathology)………………………………… 14 1.7. Clinical Signs…………………………………………………................. 14 1.7.1. Per acute Syndrome………………………………………………… 15 page 1.7.2. Acute Syndrome…………………………………………………….. 15 1.7.3. Sub acute Syndrome………………………………………………… 17 1.8. Resistance and immunity……………………………………………… 17 1.8.1 Innate and passive immunity………………………………………… 17 1.8.2 Active immunity……………………………………………………. -
The Legacy of Books Galore
The conversations must go on. Thank You. To the Erie community and beyond, the JES is grateful for your support in attending the more than 100 digital programs we’ve hosted in 2020 and for reading the more than 100 publications we’ve produced. A sincere thank you to the great work of our presenters and authors who made those programs and publications possible which are available for on-demand streaming, archived, and available for free at JESErie.org. JEFFERSON DIGITAL PROGRAMMING Dr. Aaron Kerr: Necessary Interruptions: Encounters in the Convergence of Ecological and Public Health * Dr. Andre Perry - Author of Know you’re your Price, on His Latest Book, Racism in America, and the Black Lives Matter Movement * Dr. Andrew Roth: Years of Horror: 1968 and 2020; 1968: The Far Side of the Moon and the Birth of Culture Wars * Audrey Henson - Interview with Founder of College to Congress, Audrey Henson * Dr. Avi Loeb: Outer Space, Earth, and COVID-19 * Dr. Baher Ghosheh - Israel-U.A.E.-Bahrain Accord: One More Step for Peace in the Middle East? * Afghanistan: When and How Will America’s Longest War End? * Bruce Katz and Ben Speggen: COVID-19 and Small Businesses * Dr. Camille Busette - Director of the Race, Prosperity, and Inclusion Initiative and Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution * Caitlin Welsh - COVID-19 and Food Security/Food Security during COVID-19: U.S. and Global Perspective * Rev. Charles Brock - Mystics for Skeptics * Dr. David Frew - How to Be Happy: The Modern Science of Life Satisfaction * On the Waterfront: Exploring Erie’s Wildlife, Ships, and History * Accidental Paradise: 13,000-Year History of Presque Isle * David Kozak - Road to the White House 2020: Examining Polls, Examining Victory, and the Electoral College * Deborah and James Fallows: A Conversation * Donna Cooper, Ira Goldstein, Jeffrey Beer, Brian J. -
Ppr) in in the White Nile State, Sudani
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by KhartoumSpace SURVEY AND SEROLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS ON PESTE DES PETITS RUMINANTS (PPR) IN IN THE WHITE NILE STATE, SUDANI By Wifag Abdalla Mohamed Ali B.V.Sc. (1989) University of Khartoum Supervisor Dr. Abdelwahid Saeed Ali Babiker A thesis submitted to the University of Khartoum in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Tropical Animal Health (M.T.A.H) Department of Preventive Medicine and Veterinary Public Health Faculty of Veterinary Medicine University of Khartoum June 2009 To the soul of my father To my lovely children To my great mother Rawan To my dearest sisters, Sara Brothers and husband Ahmed With warm wide wishes with keen kind kisses i ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First of all my thanks and praise to almighty Allah for the most beneficent, merciful for giving me health, strength and willpower to complete this study. Sincere gratitude to my supervisor Dr. Abdelwahid Saeed Ali Babiker for his guidance, advice ,attention ,kindness and unlimited help. I am grateful to Dr. Khitma Elmalik the coordinator of the master program. Department of Preventive Medicine. Faculty of Veterinary Medicine .for her encouragement and kindness during the master course. My kind regard and thanks to Dr. Yahia Hassan Ali and Dr . Intisar Kamil Saeed, Department of Virology, the Central Veterinary Research Laboratory( CVRL) Soba ,for performing ELISA. I would like to express my thanks to general directorate of Animal Resources in White Nile State, for giving me this chance and the leave of the study. -
Molecular Evolution of Peste Des Petits Ruminants Virus1 Murali Muniraju, Muhammad Munir, Aravindhbabu R
Molecular Evolution of Peste des Petits Ruminants Virus1 Murali Muniraju, Muhammad Munir, AravindhBabu R. Parthiban, Ashley C. Banyard, Jingyue Bao, Zhiliang Wang, Chrisostom Ayebazibwe, Gelagay Ayelet, Mehdi El Harrak, Mana Mahapatra, Geneviève Libeau, Carrie Batten, and Satya Parida Despite safe and efficacious vaccines against peste endemic to much of Africa, the Middle East, and Asia des petits ruminants virus (PPRV), this virus has emerged (1,2). The causative agent, PPRV virus (PPRV), belongs to as the cause of a highly contagious disease with serious the family Paramyxoviridae, genus Morbillivirus (3) and economic consequences for small ruminant agriculture groups with rinderpest virus (RPV), measles virus (MV), across Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. We used complete and canine distemper virus. Sheep and goats are the major and partial genome sequences of all 4 lineages of the virus hosts of PPRV, and infection has also been reported in a few to investigate evolutionary and epidemiologic dynamics of PPRV. A Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of all PPRV lin- wild small ruminant species (2). Researchers have specu- eages mapped the time to most recent common ancestor lated that RPV eradication has further enabled the spread and initial divergence of PPRV to a lineage III isolate at the of PPRV (4,5). Transmission of PPRV from infected goats beginning of 20th century. A phylogeographic approach esti- to cattle has been recently reported (6), and PPRV antigen mated the probability for root location of an ancestral PPRV has been detected in lions (7) and camels (8). These reports and individual lineages as being Nigeria for PPRV, Senegal suggest that PPRV can switch hosts and spread more read- for lineage I, Nigeria/Ghana for lineage II, Sudan for lineage ily in the absence of RPV (4,6,8). -
Secret Assassins
.. “BIRD FLU” HOAX EXPOSED A. True Ott, PhD –4/5/06 Exactly 30 years ago, in 1976, National Headlines Proclaimed: “Swine Flu Pandemic Poised to Exceed 1918 Death Toll”. The national news media swept America away in an unprecedented fear-based, propaganda campaign to promote what is now recognized as a tremendous money-making hoax designed to enrich large pharmaceutical houses by selling billions of dollars worth of “Swine Flu Vaccinations” to an ignorant public. What stopped the massive scam? Three factors – 1. A few honest congressmen blew the whistle on the conspirators, 2. A few honest microbiologists and medical doctors also went public with the TRUTH, and 3. a precedent-setting series of lawsuits against Rockefeller’s “Big Five” pharmaceutical/vaccine manufacturing houses were victorious; many recipients of the “vaccine”experienced permanent paralysis and even death –all of this caused by the FDA approved and so-called “Safe, Well Tested Vaccine.” Today, alarmingly, THE EXACT SAME SCRIPT PLAYED IN 1976 is once again unfolding on the World Stage. Many of the “players” are the same. The goals of the conspirators are somewhat different however. Money does NOT appear to be the key issue today –POWER, MANIPULATION AND FASCIST CONTROL OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE are apparently today the key issues. The Horror Story does not need to be re-written. All one has to do is read and internalize the work honest scientists published in 1976, and the history of the 1918 pandemic. The TRUTH still is TRUTH today, 30 years later. I would personally submit, the stakes are infinitely greater, however.