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Necrobacillosis

   Also found in: Medical 0.01 sec.
Necrobacillosis 

an infectious disease in animals, characterized by the onset of necrosis in various tissues.

The causative agent of necrobacillosis, Bacteroides necrophorum, was first isolated by R. Koch in 1881. All farm animals and many animals in the wild are susceptible to necrobacillosis. Sick animals are the source of the causative agent. The microbes penetrate the animals’ bodies through the gastrointestinal tract or through wounds. The disease can be either subacute or chronic. Immunity does not develop.

Necrobacillosis is diagnosed on the basis of the clinical picture, taking into account epizootiological data and the secretions of cultures taken from affected tissues. Treatment involves the topical use of various disinfectant preparations and the use of tetracycline antibiotics. The careful maintenance of sanitary conditions in the places where the animals are kept is the chief preventive measure. When necrobacillosis arises, affected animals are immediately isolated and treated, and their milk is destroyed. Carcasses and organs in which sepsis has occurred are also destroyed or made use of after processing.

REFERENCE

Kovalenko, Ia. R. Nekrobatsillez sel’skokhoziaistvennykh zhivotnykh. Moscow, 1948.


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There is another condition called Schmorl's disease or necrobacillosis, that is associated with lesions confined usually to the face, head and neck.
Key Words: Fusobacterium, meningitis, necrobacillosis ********** Fusobacterium necrophorum is a Gram-negative, strictly anaerobic, nonmotile rod that belongs to the family of Bacteroidaceae and is the cause of a constellation of clinical syndromes known collectively as necrobacillosis.
Most notably, Alston described 21 cases of classic Lemierre's syndrome in his review of 280 cases of necrobacillosis that had been published in the world literature between 1933 and 1955.
 
 
 
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