Overview
- Editors:
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Diane G. Newell
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Central Veterinary Laboratory, Addlestone, UK
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Julian M. Ketley
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University of Leicester, Leicester, UK
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Roger A. Feldman
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The London Hospital Medical College, London, UK
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Table of contents (134 chapters)
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Veterinary and Poultry Infections—Their Control and Antimicrobial Resistance
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- G. Cattoli, R. Zanoni, C. Benazzi, L. Della Salda, A. Serraino, V. Sanguinetti
Pages 341-343
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- Dale M. Cooper, Connie J. Gebhart, Debra L. Swanson
Pages 345-350
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- Rosemary Grogono-Thomas, Ralph M. Woodland
Pages 351-354
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- J. S. Wallace, K. N. Stanley, K. Jones
Pages 359-362
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- Martijn J. B. M. Weijtens, Jan van der Plas, Bert A. P. Urlings, Peter G. H. Bijker
Pages 363-367
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- Yakut Akyon, Gulsen Hascelik, K. Serdar Diker
Pages 369-370
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- Teresa Alarcón, Isabel Sánchez Romero, Diego Domingo, Aurora Limia, Francisco De Diaz Rojas, Manuel López-Brea
Pages 371-374
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- Eva Berndtson, A. Franklin, M. Horn af Rantzien
Pages 375-376
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- Barbara Geilhausen, Rüdiger Koenen, Gottfried Mauff
Pages 377-381
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- Amera Gibreel, Ola Sköld
Pages 383-387
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- P. M. F. J. Koenraad, W. F. Jacobs-Reitsma, T. Van Der Laan, R. R. Beumer, F. M. Rombouts
Pages 389-392
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- V. Korolik, J. Chang, P. J. Coloe
Pages 393-398
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- Manuel López-Brea, Maria Jose Martinez, Diego Domingo, Isabel Sanchez Romero, Juan Carlos Sanz, Teresa Alarcón
Pages 399-401
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- Claudio Piersimoni, Daniele Crotti, Domenico Nista, Stefano Bornigia, Giuseppina De Sio
Pages 403-406
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Epidemiology, Clinical Aspects, and Treatment Including New and Emerging Diseases
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- Roger Feldman, David Strachan
Pages 419-423
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- John M. Cowden, Guillermo M. Ruiz-Palacios
Pages 427-429
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- Martin B. Skirrow, Ban Mishu-Allos, J.-P. Butzler
Pages 431-433
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About this book
By 1977 it was clear that the thermophilic campylobacters were a major cause of acute bacterial enteritis. In response to that observation an international workshop was convened in Reading, England, and attracted over 130 participants. Many of these individuals resolutely returned for the eighth in the series of biennial international workshops, this time held in Win chester, England, in July 1995. All were surprised at the continued, and even expanding, re search effort in this narrow microbiological field. Such a lasting interest is undoubtedly a reflection of a consistent rise in the incidence of infection, the growing number of closely re lated organisms and disease associations, and an ever-increasing awareness by the public and government agencies of public health and food safety issues. The second workshop in Brussels in 1983 was a forum that demonstrated the growing awareness in the campylobacter community of the existence of campylobacter-like organisms and provided the platform for presentations describing the association of these organisms, now classified in the genus Helicobacter. with gastroduodenal disease. The clinical aspects of the research into helicobacters is now thoroughly covered in several other meetings, and the remit of the international workshop has been expanded to provide a forum for the presentation of the basic microbiological research carried out on these bacteria. In a continuation of this ap proach the remit of the workshop has been further extended to other related organisms, reflect ing that there are many other campylobacter-like organisms still to identify and characterize.
Editors and Affiliations
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Central Veterinary Laboratory, Addlestone, UK
Diane G. Newell
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University of Leicester, Leicester, UK
Julian M. Ketley
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The London Hospital Medical College, London, UK
Roger A. Feldman