Description
Book SynopsisThe influence of basic science, particularly molecular biology, in human and veterinary medicine revolutionized thinking in many aspects and changed fundamentally and creatively the classical strategy for research and prevention of infectious diseases.
Table of Contents1 Yaba virus.- 2 Poxvirus infections in domestic animals.- 3 Poxviruses of rabbits.- 4 Ectromelia (mousepox) virus.- 5 Poxvirus infection in zoo-kept mammals.- 6 Herpesvirus infection in old and new world monkeys.- 7 Baboon lymphoma viruses.- 8 B Virus (cercopithecine herpesvirus 1) infections in monkeys and man.- 9 Simian varicella virus.- 10 Herpesvirus infections of equine animals.- 11 Herpesvirus infections of bovidae.- 12 Aujeszky’s disease (Pseudorabies) in laboratory and captive animals.- 13 Herpesvirus of cats.- 14 Herpesvirus sylvilagus: lymphoproliferative agent of cottontail rabbits.- 15 The pathogenicity and molecular biology of guinea pig cytomegalovirus.- 16 Nucleotide sequence comparison of simian adenoviruses SA7P and SA7: implication for the classification of SA7P.- 17 Deer papillomaviruses.- 18 Parvoviruses.- 19 Woodchuck hepatitis virus.- 20 Ground squirrel hepatitis virus.- 21 Duck hepatitis B virus.- 22 Retroviruses.- 23 Distribution of human T-cell leukemia virus type-1 (HTLV-1) family among non-human primates.- 24 Influenza A viruses in man and animals: The molecular basis of evolution, epidemiology, and pathogenicity.- 25 Paramyxovirus isolated from migrating ducks.- 26 Rabies.- 27 Reoviruses.- 28 Genetic variation of foot and mouth disease virus.- 29 Hantaan virus.