BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR INFECTIONS OF LABORATORY MICE: EFFECTS ON RESEARCH
Baker, D.G. (2003) Natural Pathogens of Laboratory Animals: Their Effects on Research. ASM Press, Washington, DC.
Barthold, S.W. (2002) "Muromics": Mouse genomics from the perspective of the laboratory mouse.
Comparative Medicine 52:206-223.Barthold, S.W. (2004) Genetically altered mice: phenotypes, no phenotypes, and faux phenotypes. Genetica 122:75-88.
Barthold, S.W. (2004) Intercurrent infections in genetically engineered mice. In: Mouse Models of Human Cancer (ed. E.C. Holland), pp. 31-41. Wiley-Liss, Hoboken, NJ.
Bhatt, P.N., Jacoby, R.O., Morse, H.C., III, & New, A.E. (1986) Viral and Mycoplasmal Infections of Laboratory Rodents: Effects on Biomedical Research. Academic Press, New York.
Franklin, C.L. (2006) Microbial considerations in genetically engineered mouse research. ILAR Journal 47:141-155.
Lindsey, J.R., Boorman, G.A., Collins, M.J., Jr., Hsu, C.-K., Van Hoosier, G.L., Jr., & Wagner, J.E. (1991) Infectious Diseases of Mice and Rats. National Academy Press, Washington, DC.
Newcomer, C.E. & Fox, J.G. (2007) Zoonoses and other human health hazards. In: The Mouse in Biomedical Research: Diseases (eds. J.G. Fox, S.W Barthold, M.T. Davisson, C.E. Newcomer, F. W. Quimby, & A. L. Smith), Vol. 2, pp. 721-747. Academic Press, New York.
More on the topic BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR INFECTIONS OF LABORATORY MICE: EFFECTS ON RESEARCH:
- INFECTIONS OF LABORATORY MICE: EFFECTS ON RESEARCH
- Wild, and probably pet mice, may serve as hosts to numerous helminth species, but laboratory mice have a limited repertoire of helminth parasitisms, most notably pinworms and tapeworms.
- Mice in a number of university and research institute mouse colonies in Japan have been found to be infected with B. hinzii.
- Mice are susceptible to respiratory tract infections with two members of the Paramyxovirus family,
- BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR FUNGAL INFECTIONS
- BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR VIRAL INFECTIONS
- BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR BACTERIAL AND FUNGAL INFECTIONS
- BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR VIRAL INFECTIONS
- BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR VIRAL INFECTIONS
- BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR BACTERIAL AND FUNGAL INFECTIONS
- BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR BACTERIAL INFECTIONS
- BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR VIRAL INFECTIONS
- Bibliography for viral infections
- Bibliography for viral infections
- BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR FUNGAL INFECTIONS
- BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR BACTERIAL INFECTIONS
- BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR BACTERIAL INFECTIONS
- Wild rats are host to many nematodes that rarely infest laboratory rats, but there is ample evidence of wild rats serving as sources of laboratory rat infestations, generally through contamination of feed and bedding and occasionally through arthropod intermediate hosts, such as cockroaches.