PMID: 7370679Mar 22, 1980Paper

Veterinary surgeons as vectors of Salmonella dublin

British Medical Journal
E Williams

Abstract

Salmonella dublin is an important bovine pathogen, causing dysentery, abortion, and death from septicaemia. S dublin dermatitis, a little-recognised occupational hazard for veterinary surgeons, does not cause serious disability or inconvenience. During a survey of brucellosis in south-west Wales four cases of S dublin dermatitis were seen in veterinary surgeons. One surgeon was reinfected three years later. On all five occasions the veterinary surgeons had not worn or had discarded polyethylene gloves. An apparently healthy cow may serve as a latent carrier of S dublin. Thus when disease starts in a closed, protected herd reactivation of infection within the herd is usually blamed and its introduction by extraneous agents considered to be unlikely. Veterinary surgeons should be regarded as potential vectors of S dublin.

References

Jul 28, 1979·British Medical Journal·S B WernerI Kamei
Sep 8, 1979·British Medical Journal·R G Small, J C Sharp
Feb 1, 1979·The Journal of Hygiene·R G Small, J C Sharp
Jul 1, 1977·The British Veterinary Journal·A H Nazer, A D Osborne
Jan 17, 1976·The Veterinary Record·B M WilliamsJ Lewis
Apr 5, 1975·The Veterinary Record·B M Williams
Aug 31, 1956·Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences·W W SPINK
May 19, 1960·The New England Journal of Medicine·C R OWENH G STOENNER

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Citations

Jul 1, 1995·The British Veterinary Journal·A J LaxT S Wallis
Feb 18, 2011·Veterinary Research·Karin HoelzerMartin Wiedmann
May 1, 1982·The Medical Journal of Australia·J A GilliansP H Dyte
Jun 29, 2021·EFSA Journal·UNKNOWN EFSA Panel on Biological Hazards (BIOHAZ)Luisa Peixe

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