Keywords
1st Edition, 2018
Edited by Mark Chambers, Stephen Gordon, F. Olea-Popelka & Paul Barrow
Published by CABI c/o Robert Taylor
Information: info@cabi.org
This book provides an essential, comprehensive treatise on bovine tuberculosis and the bacterium that causes it, Mycobacterium bovis. Bovine tuberculosis remains a major cause of economic loss in cattle industries worldwide, exacerbated in some countries by the presence of a substantial wildlife reservoir. It is a major zoonosis, causing human infection through consumption of unpasteurised milk or by close contact with infected animals.
Following a systematic approach, expert international authors cover epidemiology and the global situation; microbial virulence and pathogenesis; host responses to the pathogen; and diagnosis and control of the disease.
Aimed at researchers and practising veterinarians, this book is essential for those needing comprehensive information on the pathogen and disease, and offers a summary of key information learned from human tuberculosis research.
Table of contents
1: Bovine tuberculosis: worldwide picture
2: Mycobacterium bovis as the causal agent of human tuberculosis: public health implications
3: Economics of bovine tuberculosis: a One Health issue
4: The epidemiology of Mycobacterium bovis infection in cattle
5: Mycobacterium bovis molecular typing and surveillance
6: Bovine tuberculosis in other domestic species
7: Role of wildlife in the epidemiology of Mycobacterium bovis
8: Molecular virulence mechanisms of Mycobacterium bovis
9: The pathology and pathogenesis of Mycobacterium bovis infection
10: Innate immune response in bovine tuberculosis
11: Adaptive immunity
12: Immunological diagnosis
13: Biomarkers in the diagnosis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex infections
14: Vaccination of domestic and wild animals against tuberculosis
15: Managing bovine tuberculosis: successes and issues
16: Perspectives on global bovine tuberculosis control