1955
DOI: 10.1084/jem.102.4.489
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Tendovaginitis With Arthritis, a New Syndrome of Chickens: Isolation and Characterization of an Infectious Agent

Abstract: The findings with an infectious agent isolated from cases of tendovaginitis or arthritis of chickens were as follows:— Cultures, stains, and darkfield studies of material containing this agent for spirochetes, bacteria, and pleuropneumonia-like organisms were negative. The yolk sac was the preferred route of inoculation, all of the embryos dying in 4 to 12 days. The agent passed through a bacteria-retaining filter, but with a drop in titer. Antibiotic… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Lecce et al. (116) isolated an agent in chicken embryos and studied it extensively. They described typical coccobacilliform bodies characteristic of PPLO, but considered the agent to be a rickettsia since they could not cultivate it in any of several media which supported growth of Mycoplasma from avian respira tory tracts.…”
Section: (163)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lecce et al. (116) isolated an agent in chicken embryos and studied it extensively. They described typical coccobacilliform bodies characteristic of PPLO, but considered the agent to be a rickettsia since they could not cultivate it in any of several media which supported growth of Mycoplasma from avian respira tory tracts.…”
Section: (163)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The isolation and identification of Mycoplasma from infectious synovitis (tendovaginitis) of chickens required still further modification of media and techniques. Lecce et al (116) isolated an agent in chicken embryos and studied it extensively. They described typical coccobacilliform bodies characteristic of PPLO, but considered the agent to be a rickettsia since they could not cultivate it in any of several media which supported growth of Mycoplasma from avian respira tory tracts.…”
Section: Domermuth and Johnsonmentioning
confidence: 99%