1961
DOI: 10.1038/189240a0
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Five Less-Common Salmonella Serotypes from Congo Reptiles

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1964
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Cited by 4 publications
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“…He showed that among thirty-three different serotypes found in lizard droppings, twenty-one of the types were also isolated from human cases in the same area, but only one of these isolations was S. typhimurium. Fulton, Szafran & Lesko (1961) isolated Salmonella from reptiles in the Congo in an area where infection from man and rodents was unlikely and suggested that the strains obtained were present in reptiles as intestinal commensals. In Australia, salmonella isolations from native animals were described by Lee & Mackerras (1955), who considered that the carrier state was the more usual condition in reptiles, but that adverse environmental factors might lead to disease in the host.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…He showed that among thirty-three different serotypes found in lizard droppings, twenty-one of the types were also isolated from human cases in the same area, but only one of these isolations was S. typhimurium. Fulton, Szafran & Lesko (1961) isolated Salmonella from reptiles in the Congo in an area where infection from man and rodents was unlikely and suggested that the strains obtained were present in reptiles as intestinal commensals. In Australia, salmonella isolations from native animals were described by Lee & Mackerras (1955), who considered that the carrier state was the more usual condition in reptiles, but that adverse environmental factors might lead to disease in the host.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%