Top 10 similar words or synonyms for haemobartonella

eperythrozoon    0.920308

crocodyli    0.897176

calymmatobacterium    0.884975

mustelae    0.882508

neorickettsia    0.881499

arcanobacterium    0.880124

bacilliformis    0.875676

caballi    0.873531

avibacterium    0.873049

dagmatis    0.873029

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for haemobartonella

Article Example
Mycoplasma haemomuris Mycoplasma haemomuris, formerly known as "Haemobartonella muris" and "Bartonella muris", is a Gram-negative bacillus. It is known to cause anemia in rats and mice.
Feline infectious anemia Feline infectious anemia (FIA) is an infectious disease found in felines, causing anemia and other symptoms. The disease is caused by a variety of infectious agents, most commonly "Mycoplasma haemofelis" (which used to be called "haemobartonella"). "Haemobartonella" and "eperythrozoon" species were reclassified as mycoplasmas. Coinfection often occurs with other infectious agents, including: feline leukemia virus (FeLV), feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), "ehrlichia" species, "anaplasma phagocytophilum", and Candidatus "Mycoplasma haemominutum".
Mycoplasma haemofelis Before the advent of modern PCR techniques, "M. haemofelis" and closely related Haemoplasmas "Candidatus Mycoplasma haemominutum" and "Candidatus Mycoplasma turicensis" were collectively classified as "Haemobartonella felis" based on similarities in gross morphology. The "Candidatus" distinction is given to newly described species in which additional evidence is required to support their classification. The inability of researchers to culture many "Mycoplasma spp." "in vitro" has made classification difficult. PCR analysis of 16S rRNA sequences of "Haemobartonella spp." showed greater similarity to those of Mollicutes than to those of the family Anaplasmataceae in the order Rickettsiales to which they were previously thought to belong.
Mycoplasma haemofelis Mycoplasma haemofelis (formerly "Haemobartonella felis") is a gram negative epierythrocytic parasitic bacterium. It often appears in bloodsmears as small (0.6μM) coccoid bodies, sometimes forming short chains of 3 to 6 organisms. It is usually the causative agent of Feline Infectious Anemia (FIA) in the United States.
Cytauxzoonosis One way to diagnose "C. felis" is by taking blood and performing a peripheral blood smear to look for the erythrocytic piroplasms. The erythrocytic piroplasms are usually shaped like signet rings and are 1 to 1.5 µm. Not all cats that are infected will have the piroplasms on their blood smear, especially if they are early in disease course. Another method of diagnosing infection in sick cats is to take needle aspirates of affected organs and find the schizonts inside mononuclear cells in the tissues; examination of tissue is also useful for the diagnosis after cats have died. Blood samples can be sent away for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing to confirm infection. Other diseases that might resemble cytauxzoonosis should be ruled out. A major rule-out for "C. felis" is "Mycoplasma haemofelis" (formerly known as "Haemobartonella felis"); clinical signs can be similar to cytuaxzoonosis and the organism may be confused on the peripheral smear. Because it causes similar signs in outdoor cats during the spring and summer, tularemia is another disease the veterinarian may want to rule out.