2015
DOI: 10.1186/s13620-015-0055-0
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Profiling oral and digital lesions in sheep in Ireland

Abstract: BackgroundDuring the FMD outbreak in Ireland and the UK in 2001, there was significant uncertainty amongstveterinary practitioners and government veterinary inspectors surrounding the clinical diagnosis of FMD insheep. This situation was complicated by reports of idiopathic oral ulcers that closely resembled FMD ongross appearance which at that time were referred to as ovine mouth and gum obscure disease.MethodsA field and abattoir study was carried out to determine the frequency, appearance and significance o… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In a large population of animals, there inevitably is some "background noise" of oral lesions or lameness, due to endemic infectious diseases such as contagious pustular dermatitis (orf) or non-infectious causes such as chemical burns. For example, a recent field study in sheep (28) found oral lesions in 1% of animals. Even if most of these can be determined not to be FMD by other means, a large number of cases will remain that warrant laboratory diagnosis.…”
Section: Fmd Exclusion Testing In Practice Europementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a large population of animals, there inevitably is some "background noise" of oral lesions or lameness, due to endemic infectious diseases such as contagious pustular dermatitis (orf) or non-infectious causes such as chemical burns. For example, a recent field study in sheep (28) found oral lesions in 1% of animals. Even if most of these can be determined not to be FMD by other means, a large number of cases will remain that warrant laboratory diagnosis.…”
Section: Fmd Exclusion Testing In Practice Europementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Proliferative crust lesions as pathognomonic clinical signs of ORFV infection could be found in the area of lips, nostrils, mouth, udder, and foot (Maganga et al, 2016;Peralta et al, 2018). There are many other diseases causing similar proliferative lesions, including Foot and mouth disease (FMD) (FitzGerald et al, 2015), Bluetongue (Backx et al, 2007), Peste des petits ruminants (OIE, 2013) and Sheep pox (OIE, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%