USGS logo Yale School of Medicine logo.
The Canary Database
Yale Occupational and Environmental Medicine Program
135 College St
Room 366
New Haven, CT, USA
06510-2283




Lab Anim Sci 1999 Dec;49(6):634-8.

Evaluation of cynomolgus (Macaca fascicularis) and rhesus (Macaca mulatta) monkeys as experimental models of acute Q fever after aerosol exposure to phase-I Coxiella burnetii.

Waag DM, Byrne WR, Estep J, Gibbs P, Pitt ML, Banfield CM

Bacteriology Division, United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5011, USA.

Find in a library icon

Article type: Curated - Canary ID: 1786

Subject Terms

Acute Disease
Aerosols
Animals
Antibodies, Bacterial/analysis
Antigens, Bacterial/immunology
Body Temperature
Coxiella burnetii/immunology/*pathogenicity
*Disease Models, Animal
Evaluation Studies
Female
Humans
Lung Diseases, Interstitial/diagnosis/immunology/microbiology/veterinary
Lung/pathology/radiography
Macaca fascicularis/*microbiology
Macaca mulatta/*microbiology
Male
Mice
Monkey Diseases/diagnosis/immunology/*microbiology
Q Fever/diagnosis/immunology/microbiology/*veterinary
Serologic Tests/veterinary

COinS:

PMID: 10638499

Go to Pubmed:

[This Article] [Related Articles]

Registry numbers

0 (Aerosols)
0 (Antibodies, Bacterial)
0 (Antigens, Bacterial)


Top of page.