Selected article for: "bacterial culture and BAL bronchoalveolar lavage"

Title: 2016 ACVIM Forum Research Abstract Program
  • Document date: 2016_5_31
  • ID: 2y1y8jpx_653
    Snippet: CHARACTERIZATION OF THE FELINE RESPIRATORY MICROBIOME. Aida I. Vientos-Plotts 1 , Aaron Ericsson 2 , Hans Rindt 1 , Megan Grobman 1 , Amber Graham 1 , Kaitlin Bishop 1 , Leah Cohn 1 , Carol Reinero 1 . 1 University of Missouri, College of Veterinary Medicine Comparative Internal Medicine Laboratory, Columbia, MO, USA, 2 University of Missouri Metagenomics Center, Columbia, MO, USA Although lower airways have been considered sterile by culture, se.....
    Document: CHARACTERIZATION OF THE FELINE RESPIRATORY MICROBIOME. Aida I. Vientos-Plotts 1 , Aaron Ericsson 2 , Hans Rindt 1 , Megan Grobman 1 , Amber Graham 1 , Kaitlin Bishop 1 , Leah Cohn 1 , Carol Reinero 1 . 1 University of Missouri, College of Veterinary Medicine Comparative Internal Medicine Laboratory, Columbia, MO, USA, 2 University of Missouri Metagenomics Center, Columbia, MO, USA Although lower airways have been considered sterile by culture, sequencing 16S rRNA amplicons has revealed diverse bacterial species in human lungs. Using healthy research cats in a stable environment, we hypothesized that 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing of DNA from bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), oropharyngeal and fecal swabs, and blood, would reveal distinct microbiomes from each site.

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