Author: Pardon, Bart; Buczinski, Sébastien
Title: Bovine Respiratory Disease Diagnosis: What Progress Has Been Made in Infectious Diagnosis? Cord-id: 0obomty2 Document date: 2020_5_23
ID: 0obomty2
Snippet: When it is desired to identify infectious agents involved in an outbreak of bovine respiratory disease, a variety of possible sampling methods may be used. For field use, the deep nasopharyngeal swab, transtracheal wash, and nonendoscopic bronchoalveolar lavage are most feasible. At present, bacterial culture and polymerase chain reaction testing are most commonly used to identify infectious agents. Interpretation of test results can be challenging, particularly for opportunistic pathogens. Evid
Document: When it is desired to identify infectious agents involved in an outbreak of bovine respiratory disease, a variety of possible sampling methods may be used. For field use, the deep nasopharyngeal swab, transtracheal wash, and nonendoscopic bronchoalveolar lavage are most feasible. At present, bacterial culture and polymerase chain reaction testing are most commonly used to identify infectious agents. Interpretation of test results can be challenging, particularly for opportunistic pathogens. Evidence-based guidelines for precise interpretation of microbiologic tests results are lacking; however, approaches that have been practically useful for the management of bovine respiratory disease outbreaks are presented.
Search related documents:
Co phrase search for related documents- active infection and live vaccine: 1
- acute phase and live vaccine: 1, 2, 3, 4
Co phrase search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date