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P. multocida is the most frequent causative agent in human Pasteurella infection.
Pasteurella multocida was first found in 1878 in cholera-infected birds.
Pasteurella canis is a Gram-negative coccobacillus that shows bipolar staining.
Pasteurella pestis is extinct, of course.
Pasteurella is a genus of Gram-negative, facultatively anaerobic bacteria.
Originally, the microoganism was named Pasteurella pestis.
Pasteurella species are non-motile and pleomorphic.
Pasteurella multocida (P. septica) is carried in mouth and respiratory tract of several animals, notably cats.
Pasteurella was first described around 1880 and thought to be associated with chicken cholera and hemorrhagic septicemia in animals.
Pasteurella spp.
Pasteurella pestis: organism causing bubonic plague.
It was Pasteurella pestis, Watson.
Pasteurella occurs in many cats' mouths, a large percentage of dog mouths, and frequently in rabbits.
Pasteurella tularensis was on the list of microorganisms that Spertzel was charged with monitoring in Iraq.
Pasteurella canis sp.
Pasteurella multocida is a Gram-negative, non-motile coccobacillus that is penicillin-sensitive.
'Pasteurellosis' is an infection with a species of the bacterium genus 'Pasteurella' , which is found in humans and animals.
Pasteurella bacteria, known colloquially as "snuffles," is usually misdiagnosed and has been known to be a factor in the overuse of antibiotics among rabbits.
Pasteurella langaa, is a Gram-negative, nonmotile, penicillin-sensitive coccobacillus belonging to the Pasteurellaceae family.
A patient with a perforated eardrum developed meningitis after his dog passed on a Pasteurella multocida infection by licking his ear.
Pasteurella multocida often exists as a commensal in the upper respiratory tracts of many livestock, poultry, and domestic pet species, especially cats and dogs.
Pasteurella phage F108 is a temperate bacteriophage (a virus that infects bacteria) of the family Myoviridae, genus Hp1likevirus.
In 1879, Henri Toussaint identified a bacterial species involved in chicken cholera and named the genus in honor of Pasteur, Pasteurella.
'Yersinia pestis' (formerly 'Pasteurella pestis') is a Gram-negative bacillus bacterium belonging to the family Enterobacteriaceae.
Strains that cause atrophic rhinitis in pigs are unique as they also have Pasteurella Multocida Toxin (PMT)residing on a bacteriophage.