1. Cilia-associated Respiratory Bacillus in Wild Rats in Central Iowa
- Author
-
Kim A. Brogden, Howard D. Lehmkuhl, and Randall C. Cutlip
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Respiratory Tract Diseases ,Bacillus ,Animals, Wild ,Microbiology ,Rodent Diseases ,Gram-Negative Bacteria ,medicine ,Animals ,Cilia ,Respiratory system ,Lung ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Ecology ,biology ,Cilium ,Respiratory disease ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Iowa ,Rats ,Cilia-associated respiratory bacillus ,Trachea ,Microscopy, Electron ,Chronic disease ,Chronic Disease ,Lung tissue ,Bacteria - Abstract
Twenty-eight wild rats were live-trapped in central Iowa (USA) to estimate the prevalence of the cilia-associated respiratory (CAR) bacillus. Both light and electron microscopy were used to look for the Gram-negative, filamentous bacterium among cilia in tracheal and lung tissue sections. The organism was observed in the trachea of 20 rats with chronic respiratory disease and in the trachea of three of eight normal rats. Therefore, the organism appears to be common among wild rats in central Iowa.
- Published
- 1993