1. A comparative study of the disease in cattle caused by Theileria parva or T. lawrencei: II. Hematology, clinical chemistry, coagulation studies and complement.
- Author
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Maxie MG, Dolan TT, Jura WG, Tabel H, and Flowers MJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Bilirubin blood, Blood Proteins analysis, Body Fluids analysis, Bone Marrow pathology, Cattle, Creatinine blood, Hematocrit, Leukopenia, Male, Platelet Count, Theileriasis metabolism, Theileriasis parasitology, Blood Coagulation, Complement System Proteins analysis, Theileriasis blood
- Abstract
Theileria lawrencei tick-derived stabilate infection of 8 cattle resulted in the development of panleukopenia and hypoproteinemia. In addition to these changes, T. parva infection caused mild normocytic, normochromic, non-responsive anemia at either of two dose rates. Disseminated intravascular coagulation, as indicate by positive protamine paracoagulation tests, prolonged prothrombin and partial thromboplastin times, and thrombocytopenia, developed in cattle infected with either of the Theileria spp., and was probably an important intermediary mechanism leading to death. Infection of calves with a high dose of T. parva stabilate resulted in more rapid onset of clinico-pathologic changes than did the low dose infection. Theileria lawrencei infection produced a severe, acute syndrome, the clinico-pathologic alterations of which varied in time of onset and severity between those of the T. parva high dose and low dose groups.
- Published
- 1982
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