Victoria Jane Chalker
Royal Veterinary College
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Featured researches published by Victoria Jane Chalker.
Veterinary Microbiology | 2003
Victoria Jane Chalker; Harriet W. Brooks; Joe Brownlie
Abstract Canine infectious respiratory disease (CIRD) is a multi-factorial infection that affects many kennelled dogs despite the wide use of vaccination. Current vaccines aim to protect against viral agents and a single bacterial agent, Bordetella bronchiseptica. We sought to examine the role of streptococcal species in CIRD. The isolation and identification of streptococci in the lower respiratory tract of clinically healthy dogs and those with CIRD were used to correlate the presence of specific streptococcal species with respiratory disease. In this study we report that the presence of S. equi subsp. zooepidemicus is associated with increasing severity of disease in a population of kennelled dogs with endemic CIRD.
Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2003
Victoria Jane Chalker; Crista Toomey; Shaun Opperman; Harriet W. Brooks; Michael A. Ibuoye; Joe Brownlie; Andrew N. Rycroft
ABSTRACT The role of Bordetella bronchiseptica in a natural outbreak of canine infectious respiratory disease was investigated both by culture and serological analysis. B. bronchiseptica was found in the lungs of a large proportion of clinically healthy dogs and in a greater proportion of dogs with respiratory disease. Using a lipopolysaccharide (LPS) antigen-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, we analyzed the serological responses of a large number of dogs. Dogs with high antibody levels showed no protection from disease, and there was no correlation between the development of disease and rising antibody titer. Similarly, there was no difference in antibody levels in dogs with and without B. bronchiseptica in the lungs. Antibodies to LPS have no predictive value in determining which animals will contract respiratory disease, how severe the disease will be, or which dogs will have B. bronchiseptica colonizing the lungs.
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine | 2004
Jorge F. Soares; Victoria Jane Chalker; Kerstin Erles; Sonya Holtby; Michael Waters; Stuart McArthur
Abstract During the months of April to August in 1999 and 2002, oral swabs were collected from 146 tortoises (Testudo sp.) in private collections in the United Kingdom and tested by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for the presence of Mycoplasma agassizii and Chelonian herpesvirus (ChHV). The presence of M. agassizii was confirmed by restriction digestion of the PCR product. A 307-bp fragment of the ChHV UL5 homologue gene was sequenced and found to show most similarity to equine herpesvirus type 1. A prevalence of 15.8 and 8.2% was found for M. agassizii and ChHV, respectively. Comparison of the carriage of both M. agassizii and ChHV in different species of tortoises correlated the presence of M. agassizii with Testudo horsfieldii and ChHV with Testudo marginata and Testudo graeca iberia. An association of ChHV with stomatitis was also found. Mixed infections with both agents were detected. The findings further demonstrate this pathogen–tortoise association and the cross transmission of these infections if different tortoise species are housed together.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2012
Victoria Jane Chalker; Andrew S. Waller; Katy Webb; Emma Spearing; Patricia Crosse; Joe Brownlie; Kerstin Erles
ABSTRACT The genetic diversity and antibiotic resistance profiles of 38 Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus isolates were determined from a kennelled canine population during two outbreaks of hemorrhagic pneumonia (1999 to 2002 and 2007 to 2010). Analysis of the szp gene hypervariable region and the 16S-23S rRNA intergenic spacer region and multilocus sequence typing (MLST) indicated a predominant tetO-positive, doxycycline-resistant ST-10 strain during 1999 to 2002 and a predominant tetM-positive doxycycline-resistant ST-62 strain during 2007 to 2010.
Veterinary Microbiology | 2007
Andrew N. Rycroft; Elizabeth Tsounakou; Victoria Jane Chalker
Abstract A high proportion of dogs suffer from respiratory disease when they are placed in kennels for vacation or re-homing. The role of Mycoplasma cynos as an initiating agent in canine infectious respiratory disease was investigated by examining the serological response of dogs to this organism at the time of entry into a large re-homing kennel. Forty-two paired serum samples from dogs (21-day interval) were examined for antibody to M. cynos using Western blotting. The development of antibody in the serum was related to clinical disease recorded over the same period. Sixty seven per cent of the dogs showed a two-fold or greater rise in antibody to M. cynos during the first 3 weeks in the kennel. Reactivity with a 45kDa antigen was dominant. Of those showing a positive serological reaction, 80% had recorded clinical respiratory disease while 20% remained healthy. The findings of this study show that an antibody response to M. cynos is common in dogs entering the re-homing kennel and is positively related to the development of clinical respiratory disease.
Microbiology | 2004
Victoria Jane Chalker; Wanda M.A Owen; Caren Paterson; Emily Barker; Harriet W. Brooks; Andrew N. Rycroft; Joe Brownlie
Archive | 2003
John Brownlie; Victoria Jane Chalker; Kerstin Erles
Veterinary Microbiology | 2004
Victoria Jane Chalker; Wanda M.A Owen; Caren Paterson; Joe Brownlie
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2004
Victoria Jane Chalker; Joe Brownlie
Archive | 2004
John Brownlie; Victoria Jane Chalker; Kerstin Erles