A urease test for characterizing Brucella strains
Loading...
Date
Authors
Van Drimmelen, G.C.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Pretoria : Government Printer
Abstract
Many strains of Brucella, notably the American Br. suis types are capable of
hydrolyzing urea to form CO₂ and NH₃ The reaction can proceed to the formation
of ammonium carbonate. The methods at present in use for measuring urease activity to Brucella strains are either rather inaccurate or require specialized equipment (Wohlfeil & Weiland,1927; Piishel, 1936; Ferguson & Hook, 1943; Schneider & Gunderson, 1946; Christensen, 1946; Bauer, 1949; Hoyer, 1950 ; Pacheco & Thiago de Mello, 1950; Sanders & Warner, 1951; Renoux & Quatrefages, 1951; Huddleson, 1951; Pickett, Nelson & Liberman, 1953; Niznansky & Kremery, 1953; Godgluck & Marggraff,1955). In addition they expose workers to infection with virulent material, e.g. the use of the Warburg apparatus, or Van Slyke & Archibald's (1944) titrimetric method or Conway's (1939) microdiffusion method.
For these reasons the Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Brucellosis feels
that if the urease test is to be of real value, it should be improved (1953).
In this report the work carried out at the Onderstepoort centre leading to the
institution of a routine pH threshold urease test, will be recorded. This test is
reliable and the results can be presented numerically.
Description
The articles have been scanned in colour with a HP Scanjet 5590; 600dpi. Adobe Acrobat XI Pro was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to the final presentation PDF-format.
Keywords
Veterinary medicine
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Van Drimmelen, GC 1962, 'A urease test for characterizing Brucella strains', Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research, vol. 29, no. 2, pp. 151-158.