Hepatic Lesions Caused by Migrating Larvae of Ascaris suum in chickens
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Group A consisted of chickens infected with a single dose of <i>Ascaris suum</i> and group B of chickens infected with two successive doses. At days 1, 3, 7, 14 and 21 after the first or second infection dose, six chickens from each group were sacrificed. In both groups, larvae were recovered from the livers on days 1, 3, and 7 and lungs on days 3 and 7. No larvae were detected in chickens on day 14. Clear white lesions were noticed only on the livers from chickens of group B at day 7 but had disappeared at day 14. A comparison with group B showed mild histological changes that developed relative to the livers from group A.<br>
著者
-
ODA Kenji
Research Institute for Biological Sciences
-
HIRAYAMA Norio
Research Institute for Animal Science in Biochemistry and Toxicology
-
YOSHIHARA Shinobu
Research Institute for Animal Science in Biochemistry and Toxicology
-
HATTORI Jyunko
Research Institute for Animal Science in Biochemistry and Toxicology
-
NISHIZONO Kazuya
Research Institute for Animal Science in Biochemistry and Toxicology
-
KAWAMURA Ayano
Research Institute for Animal Science in Biochemistry and Toxicology
-
SHIMOZAKI Kana
Research Institute for Animal Science in Biochemistry and Toxicology
-
NISHIDA Yumi
Research Institute for Animal Science in Biochemistry and Toxicology
-
ODA Kenji
Research Institute for Animal Science in Biochemistry and Toxicology
関連論文
- Hypoxia-Inducible Genes Encoding Small EF-Hand Proteins in Rice and Tomato
- RiceFOX : A Database of Arabidopsis Mutant Lines Overexpressing Rice Full-Length cDNA that Contains a Wide Range of Trait Information to Facilitate Analysis of Gene Function
- Gene content, organization and molecular evolution of plant organellar genomes and sex chromosomes - Insights from the case of the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha
- Hepatic Lesions Caused by Migrating Larvae of Ascaris suum in chickens
- Mutations in the CCD4 Carotenoid Cleavage Dioxygenase Gene of Yellow-Flesh Peaches
- Role of the rice transcription factor JAmyb in abiotic stress response