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distemper |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.05 sec. |
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distemper, in veterinary medicine, highly contagious, catarrhal, often fatal disease of dogs. It also affects wolves, foxes, mink, raccoons, and ferrets. Distemper is caused by a filtrable virus that is airborne; it is also spread by infected utensils, brushes, and clothing. Symptoms are high fever, apathy, and lack of appetite with resulting dehydration and loss of weight. The respiratory and gastrointestinal tracts become involved, and there is vomiting and diarrhea. A dog may recover from the above signs and then develop nervous complications, i.e., convulsions, localized muscular twitches, weakness, and paralysis. Distemper in dogs can be controlled by immunizing each animal as early as possible with a modified live-virus vaccine. distemperViral disease in two forms, canine and feline. Canine distemper is acute and highly contagious, affecting dogs, foxes, wolves, mink, raccoons, and ferrets. Most untreated cases are fatal. Infected animals are best treated with prompt injections of serum globulins; secondary infections are warded off by antibiotics. Immunity can be conferred by vaccination. Feline distemper causes a severe drop in the number of the infected cat's white blood cells. It rarely lasts more than a week, but the mortality rate is high. Vaccines offer effective immunity. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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Organochlorine levels in common seals (Phoca vitulina) that were victims and survivors of the 1988 phocine distemper epizootic. Phocine distemper virus (PDV) infection (1-3) was considered responsible for the deaths of [approximately equal to] 18,000 seals in Europe in the first recorded outbreak in 1988 (4), and of [approximately equal to] 22,000 seals in the second outbreak in 2002 (5,6). The work constitutes the "final proof" that either CDV or the closely related phocine distemper virus caused the deaths of thousands of seals in the North and Baltic seas in an epidemic that began last April (SN: 9/3/88, p. |
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