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Vaccination: Veterinary Vaccinations

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Total 186 results found since Jan 2013.

Swarna Bhasma Induces Antigen-Presenting Abilities of Macrophages and Helps Antigen Experienced CD4 < sup > + < /sup > T Cells to Acquire Th1 Phenotypes Against Leishmania donovani Antigens
Biol Trace Elem Res. 2023 Apr 24. doi: 10.1007/s12011-023-03659-3. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTIn leishmaniasis, the protective immunity is largely mediated by proinflammatory cytokine producing abilities of T cells and an efficient parasite killing by phagocytic cells. Notwithstanding a substantial progress that has been made during last decades, the mechanisms or factors involved in establishing protective immunity against Leishmania are not identified. In ancient Indian literature, metallic "bhasma," particularly that of "swarna" or gold (fine gold particles), is indicated as one of the most prominent metal-based ther...
Source: Biological Trace Element Research - April 24, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: Shashi Saini Anshul Anand Abhishek Singh Baishakhi Mahapatra Shruti Sirohi Samer Singh Rakesh K Singh Source Type: research

The Pasteurian contribution to the history of vaccines
C R Biol. 2022 Sep 13;345(3):93-107. doi: 10.5802/crbiol.83.ABSTRACTVaccination, the transmission of "vaccine", a benign disease of cows, to immunize human beings against smallpox, was invented by Jenner at the end of the eighteenth century. Pasteur, convinced that the vaccine microbe was an attenuated form of the smallpox microbe, showed that, similarly, attenuated forms of other microbes immunized against animal diseases. When applying this principle to rabies, he realized that, in this case, the vaccine was in fact composed of dead microbes. One of his students immediately exploited this result to devise a vaccine again...
Source: Comptes Rendus Biologies - February 28, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: Maxime Schwartz Source Type: research

Pasteur and the veterinarians
C R Biol. 2022 Nov 10;345(3):71-81. doi: 10.5802/crbiol.90.ABSTRACTPasteur's work on fermentations has variously influenced the conception that veterinarians had of the origin of virulent diseases. Jean-Baptiste Chauveau asserted as early as 1866 the specificity of contagious diseases and their exogenous origin. Henri Bouley was initially a supporter of the spontaneity of these diseases. He became an advocate of the germ theory when Pasteur unambiguously demonstrated the causal role of anthrax bacteridia in 1877. Pasteur then had a fruitful collaboration with veterinarians during his work on chicken cholera, swine erysipel...
Source: Comptes Rendus Biologies - February 28, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: G érard Orth Source Type: research

The Pasteurian contribution to the history of vaccines
C R Biol. 2022 Sep 13;345(3):93-107. doi: 10.5802/crbiol.83.ABSTRACTVaccination, the transmission of "vaccine", a benign disease of cows, to immunize human beings against smallpox, was invented by Jenner at the end of the eighteenth century. Pasteur, convinced that the vaccine microbe was an attenuated form of the smallpox microbe, showed that, similarly, attenuated forms of other microbes immunized against animal diseases. When applying this principle to rabies, he realized that, in this case, the vaccine was in fact composed of dead microbes. One of his students immediately exploited this result to devise a vaccine again...
Source: Comptes Rendus Biologies - February 28, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: Maxime Schwartz Source Type: research

Pasteur and the veterinarians
C R Biol. 2022 Nov 10;345(3):71-81. doi: 10.5802/crbiol.90.ABSTRACTPasteur's work on fermentations has variously influenced the conception that veterinarians had of the origin of virulent diseases. Jean-Baptiste Chauveau asserted as early as 1866 the specificity of contagious diseases and their exogenous origin. Henri Bouley was initially a supporter of the spontaneity of these diseases. He became an advocate of the germ theory when Pasteur unambiguously demonstrated the causal role of anthrax bacteridia in 1877. Pasteur then had a fruitful collaboration with veterinarians during his work on chicken cholera, swine erysipel...
Source: Comptes Rendus Biologies - February 28, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: G érard Orth Source Type: research

The Pasteurian contribution to the history of vaccines
C R Biol. 2022 Sep 13;345(3):93-107. doi: 10.5802/crbiol.83.ABSTRACTVaccination, the transmission of "vaccine", a benign disease of cows, to immunize human beings against smallpox, was invented by Jenner at the end of the eighteenth century. Pasteur, convinced that the vaccine microbe was an attenuated form of the smallpox microbe, showed that, similarly, attenuated forms of other microbes immunized against animal diseases. When applying this principle to rabies, he realized that, in this case, the vaccine was in fact composed of dead microbes. One of his students immediately exploited this result to devise a vaccine again...
Source: Comptes Rendus Biologies - February 28, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: Maxime Schwartz Source Type: research

Pasteur and the veterinarians
C R Biol. 2022 Nov 10;345(3):71-81. doi: 10.5802/crbiol.90.ABSTRACTPasteur's work on fermentations has variously influenced the conception that veterinarians had of the origin of virulent diseases. Jean-Baptiste Chauveau asserted as early as 1866 the specificity of contagious diseases and their exogenous origin. Henri Bouley was initially a supporter of the spontaneity of these diseases. He became an advocate of the germ theory when Pasteur unambiguously demonstrated the causal role of anthrax bacteridia in 1877. Pasteur then had a fruitful collaboration with veterinarians during his work on chicken cholera, swine erysipel...
Source: Comptes Rendus Biologies - February 28, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: G érard Orth Source Type: research

The Pasteurian contribution to the history of vaccines
C R Biol. 2022 Sep 13;345(3):93-107. doi: 10.5802/crbiol.83.ABSTRACTVaccination, the transmission of "vaccine", a benign disease of cows, to immunize human beings against smallpox, was invented by Jenner at the end of the eighteenth century. Pasteur, convinced that the vaccine microbe was an attenuated form of the smallpox microbe, showed that, similarly, attenuated forms of other microbes immunized against animal diseases. When applying this principle to rabies, he realized that, in this case, the vaccine was in fact composed of dead microbes. One of his students immediately exploited this result to devise a vaccine again...
Source: Comptes Rendus Biologies - February 28, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: Maxime Schwartz Source Type: research

Pasteur and the veterinarians
C R Biol. 2022 Nov 10;345(3):71-81. doi: 10.5802/crbiol.90.ABSTRACTPasteur's work on fermentations has variously influenced the conception that veterinarians had of the origin of virulent diseases. Jean-Baptiste Chauveau asserted as early as 1866 the specificity of contagious diseases and their exogenous origin. Henri Bouley was initially a supporter of the spontaneity of these diseases. He became an advocate of the germ theory when Pasteur unambiguously demonstrated the causal role of anthrax bacteridia in 1877. Pasteur then had a fruitful collaboration with veterinarians during his work on chicken cholera, swine erysipel...
Source: Comptes Rendus Biologies - February 28, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: G érard Orth Source Type: research

The Pasteurian contribution to the history of vaccines
C R Biol. 2022 Sep 13;345(3):93-107. doi: 10.5802/crbiol.83.ABSTRACTVaccination, the transmission of "vaccine", a benign disease of cows, to immunize human beings against smallpox, was invented by Jenner at the end of the eighteenth century. Pasteur, convinced that the vaccine microbe was an attenuated form of the smallpox microbe, showed that, similarly, attenuated forms of other microbes immunized against animal diseases. When applying this principle to rabies, he realized that, in this case, the vaccine was in fact composed of dead microbes. One of his students immediately exploited this result to devise a vaccine again...
Source: Comptes Rendus Biologies - February 28, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: Maxime Schwartz Source Type: research

Pasteur and the veterinarians
C R Biol. 2022 Nov 10;345(3):71-81. doi: 10.5802/crbiol.90.ABSTRACTPasteur's work on fermentations has variously influenced the conception that veterinarians had of the origin of virulent diseases. Jean-Baptiste Chauveau asserted as early as 1866 the specificity of contagious diseases and their exogenous origin. Henri Bouley was initially a supporter of the spontaneity of these diseases. He became an advocate of the germ theory when Pasteur unambiguously demonstrated the causal role of anthrax bacteridia in 1877. Pasteur then had a fruitful collaboration with veterinarians during his work on chicken cholera, swine erysipel...
Source: Comptes Rendus Biologies - February 28, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: G érard Orth Source Type: research

The Pasteurian contribution to the history of vaccines
C R Biol. 2022 Sep 13;345(3):93-107. doi: 10.5802/crbiol.83.ABSTRACTVaccination, the transmission of "vaccine", a benign disease of cows, to immunize human beings against smallpox, was invented by Jenner at the end of the eighteenth century. Pasteur, convinced that the vaccine microbe was an attenuated form of the smallpox microbe, showed that, similarly, attenuated forms of other microbes immunized against animal diseases. When applying this principle to rabies, he realized that, in this case, the vaccine was in fact composed of dead microbes. One of his students immediately exploited this result to devise a vaccine again...
Source: Comptes Rendus Biologies - February 28, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: Maxime Schwartz Source Type: research

Pasteur and the veterinarians
C R Biol. 2022 Nov 10;345(3):71-81. doi: 10.5802/crbiol.90.ABSTRACTPasteur's work on fermentations has variously influenced the conception that veterinarians had of the origin of virulent diseases. Jean-Baptiste Chauveau asserted as early as 1866 the specificity of contagious diseases and their exogenous origin. Henri Bouley was initially a supporter of the spontaneity of these diseases. He became an advocate of the germ theory when Pasteur unambiguously demonstrated the causal role of anthrax bacteridia in 1877. Pasteur then had a fruitful collaboration with veterinarians during his work on chicken cholera, swine erysipel...
Source: Comptes Rendus Biologies - February 28, 2023 Category: Biology Authors: G érard Orth Source Type: research