reactions to tick antitoxin serum and the role of atropine in treatment of dogs and cats with tick paralysis caused by ixodes holocyclus: a pilot survey. | to determine the incidence and nature of adverse reactions of dogs and cats to tick antitoxin serum and to re-evaluate the role of atropine in the treatment of tick paralysis. | 2001 | 11491215 |
paralysis tick research. | | 2000 | 10904812 |
cattle and the paralysis tick ixodes holocyclus. | paralysis of domestic stock by the paralysis tick ixodes holocyclus is chiefly a disease of young animals (especially calves) and of non-habituated stock introduced into tick-infested country in spring. the tick has a wide host range, but its principal hosts are bandicoots. the tick has one generation per year and the adult female, which causes almost all paralysis, is abundant in spring and early summer and occurs most commonly in overgrown or regrowth country where bandicoots are abundant. the ... | 1975 | 1220655 |
phylogenetic and phylogeographic relationships in ixodesholocyclus and ixodescornuatus (acari: ixodidae) inferred from cox1 and its2 sequences. | we inferred the phylogenetic and phylogeographic relationships in ticks, which were identified morphologically as ixodes holocyclus and ixodes cornuatus, from mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 (cox1) and nuclear internal transcribed spacer 2 (its2) sequences. we obtained cox1 (640bp) and its2 (527-568bp) sequences from 429 ticks from 49 localities in tasmania, victoria, new south wales and queensland, australia. our analyses show that there are two species of ixodes in eastern australia ... | 2011 | 21540032 |
genetic variation within the ticks ixodes holocyclus and ixodes cornuatus from south-eastern australia. | ticks from mainland australia (victoria, new south wales and queensland) and tasmania, identified morphologically as either ixodes holocyclus or ixodes cornuatus, were compared genetically using 24 enzyme loci. the results showed that ticks from three localities in victoria were genetically similar to i. cornuatus in tasmania, but both groups had fixed genetic differences at >45% of loci compared with other ticks on the mainland. in addition, there were fixed genetic differences at 0-60% of loci ... | 2000 | 11027781 |