Cargando…

Prevalence of viral, bacterial and parasitological diseases in rats and mice used in research environments in Australasia over a 5-y period

Viral, bacterial and parasitological infections in rats and mice used in biomedical research continue to occur despite improved housing and biosurveillance. The presence of disease in laboratory animals can lead to spurious results for research undertaken in universities, research institutes and the...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: McInnes, Elizabeth F., Rasmussen, Lorna, Fung, Peony, Auld, Amanda M., Alvarez, Luisana, Lawrence, David A., Quinn, Morgan E., Utteridge, Tammy D., del Fierro, Gloria M., Vassallo, Bianca A., Stevenson, Robert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group US 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7091690/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22012194
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/laban1111-341
_version_ 1783510047316246528
author McInnes, Elizabeth F.
Rasmussen, Lorna
Fung, Peony
Auld, Amanda M.
Alvarez, Luisana
Lawrence, David A.
Quinn, Morgan E.
Utteridge, Tammy D.
del Fierro, Gloria M.
Vassallo, Bianca A.
Stevenson, Robert
author_facet McInnes, Elizabeth F.
Rasmussen, Lorna
Fung, Peony
Auld, Amanda M.
Alvarez, Luisana
Lawrence, David A.
Quinn, Morgan E.
Utteridge, Tammy D.
del Fierro, Gloria M.
Vassallo, Bianca A.
Stevenson, Robert
author_sort McInnes, Elizabeth F.
collection PubMed
description Viral, bacterial and parasitological infections in rats and mice used in biomedical research continue to occur despite improved housing and biosurveillance. The presence of disease in laboratory animals can lead to spurious results for research undertaken in universities, research institutes and the pharmaceutical industry. Here the authors report the results of serological, microbiological, parasitological and molecular tests done on mice and rats from Australasia submitted to a rodent health monitoring laboratory (Cerberus Sciences) from 2004 to 2009. In tested mice, norovirus was the most prevalent virus and ectromelia virus was the least prevalent virus. In tested rats, pneumonia virus of mice was the most prevalent virus and adenoviruses 1 and 2 were the least prevalent viruses. In mice, Helicobacter hepaticus was the most prevalent bacterium, and in rats, Proteus spp. were the most prevalent bacteria. The most common positive helminthological finding in mice and rats was the presence of all pinworms (including Aspicularis spp. and Syphacia spp.). The most common positive protozoan findings in mice and rats were Chilomastix spp. and Trichomonads.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7091690
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher Nature Publishing Group US
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-70916902020-03-24 Prevalence of viral, bacterial and parasitological diseases in rats and mice used in research environments in Australasia over a 5-y period McInnes, Elizabeth F. Rasmussen, Lorna Fung, Peony Auld, Amanda M. Alvarez, Luisana Lawrence, David A. Quinn, Morgan E. Utteridge, Tammy D. del Fierro, Gloria M. Vassallo, Bianca A. Stevenson, Robert Lab Anim (NY) Article Viral, bacterial and parasitological infections in rats and mice used in biomedical research continue to occur despite improved housing and biosurveillance. The presence of disease in laboratory animals can lead to spurious results for research undertaken in universities, research institutes and the pharmaceutical industry. Here the authors report the results of serological, microbiological, parasitological and molecular tests done on mice and rats from Australasia submitted to a rodent health monitoring laboratory (Cerberus Sciences) from 2004 to 2009. In tested mice, norovirus was the most prevalent virus and ectromelia virus was the least prevalent virus. In tested rats, pneumonia virus of mice was the most prevalent virus and adenoviruses 1 and 2 were the least prevalent viruses. In mice, Helicobacter hepaticus was the most prevalent bacterium, and in rats, Proteus spp. were the most prevalent bacteria. The most common positive helminthological finding in mice and rats was the presence of all pinworms (including Aspicularis spp. and Syphacia spp.). The most common positive protozoan findings in mice and rats were Chilomastix spp. and Trichomonads. Nature Publishing Group US 2011-10-20 2011 /pmc/articles/PMC7091690/ /pubmed/22012194 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/laban1111-341 Text en © Nature Publishing Group 2011 This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.
spellingShingle Article
McInnes, Elizabeth F.
Rasmussen, Lorna
Fung, Peony
Auld, Amanda M.
Alvarez, Luisana
Lawrence, David A.
Quinn, Morgan E.
Utteridge, Tammy D.
del Fierro, Gloria M.
Vassallo, Bianca A.
Stevenson, Robert
Prevalence of viral, bacterial and parasitological diseases in rats and mice used in research environments in Australasia over a 5-y period
title Prevalence of viral, bacterial and parasitological diseases in rats and mice used in research environments in Australasia over a 5-y period
title_full Prevalence of viral, bacterial and parasitological diseases in rats and mice used in research environments in Australasia over a 5-y period
title_fullStr Prevalence of viral, bacterial and parasitological diseases in rats and mice used in research environments in Australasia over a 5-y period
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence of viral, bacterial and parasitological diseases in rats and mice used in research environments in Australasia over a 5-y period
title_short Prevalence of viral, bacterial and parasitological diseases in rats and mice used in research environments in Australasia over a 5-y period
title_sort prevalence of viral, bacterial and parasitological diseases in rats and mice used in research environments in australasia over a 5-y period
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7091690/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22012194
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/laban1111-341
work_keys_str_mv AT mcinneselizabethf prevalenceofviralbacterialandparasitologicaldiseasesinratsandmiceusedinresearchenvironmentsinaustralasiaovera5yperiod
AT rasmussenlorna prevalenceofviralbacterialandparasitologicaldiseasesinratsandmiceusedinresearchenvironmentsinaustralasiaovera5yperiod
AT fungpeony prevalenceofviralbacterialandparasitologicaldiseasesinratsandmiceusedinresearchenvironmentsinaustralasiaovera5yperiod
AT auldamandam prevalenceofviralbacterialandparasitologicaldiseasesinratsandmiceusedinresearchenvironmentsinaustralasiaovera5yperiod
AT alvarezluisana prevalenceofviralbacterialandparasitologicaldiseasesinratsandmiceusedinresearchenvironmentsinaustralasiaovera5yperiod
AT lawrencedavida prevalenceofviralbacterialandparasitologicaldiseasesinratsandmiceusedinresearchenvironmentsinaustralasiaovera5yperiod
AT quinnmorgane prevalenceofviralbacterialandparasitologicaldiseasesinratsandmiceusedinresearchenvironmentsinaustralasiaovera5yperiod
AT utteridgetammyd prevalenceofviralbacterialandparasitologicaldiseasesinratsandmiceusedinresearchenvironmentsinaustralasiaovera5yperiod
AT delfierrogloriam prevalenceofviralbacterialandparasitologicaldiseasesinratsandmiceusedinresearchenvironmentsinaustralasiaovera5yperiod
AT vassallobiancaa prevalenceofviralbacterialandparasitologicaldiseasesinratsandmiceusedinresearchenvironmentsinaustralasiaovera5yperiod
AT stevensonrobert prevalenceofviralbacterialandparasitologicaldiseasesinratsandmiceusedinresearchenvironmentsinaustralasiaovera5yperiod