Home
       Health cyclopedia              Quotable: "What would you attempt to do if you knew you could not fail?" - Robert Schuller  
All Topics
by Category
The Complete Guide to Health Care Resources on the Internet
 
Health
Conditions
A-Z
Gurus
Links
Contact Us
home > animal > conditions and diseases > livestock

Animal Health - Livestock

Information / Diagnosis / Treatment / Prevention
 
                       
  • External links (marked with an arrow ) open in a new window.
  • This site is a web directory and does not offer medical advice.
  • We cannot take responsibility for information found on listed sites.
 
This Page

↓ Subtopics
↓ Related Topics
↓ Health News
↓ MEDLINE Database
↓ Web Directory:
 
 
Subtopics:      Livestock > Foot and Mouth Disease  
 
Related Topics:      Cattle          Equine
Goats Sheep
Animal/Livestock Health Care Business/Animal Health/Livestock
Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy new window Open Directory: Business/Agriculture and Forestry/Livestock
 
Health News:
      new window Search millions of published articles for news on Animal Health - Livestock
The HighBeam™ Research newspaper and magazine archive contains articles from current and back issues of hundreds of publications, including: Modern Medicine, Aging, The Ardell Wellness Report, HealthFacts, Medical Post, Medical Update, Men's Health and the National Women's Health Report.
Note: Subscription required to access the full text of articles.
 
 
MEDLINE/PubMed Database of Research Articles:
     new window Search PubMed Abstracts for "Animal Health Livestock"
new window Search PubMed Central Full Text Articles from Life Sciences Journals for "Animal Health Livestock"
 
 
Web Directory:
      new window Animal Diseases : University of Nebraska Description: Articles on specific livestock diseases. (ianr.unl.edu)
new window Anthrax Description: Clinical signs that can be found in sheep, goats, cattle and humans. Includes treatments that are described. (agspsrv34.agric.wa.gov.au)
new window Brucellosis Fact Sheet Description: Brucellosis is a bacterial disease that can be passed from animals, such as cows, sheep and goats, to humans. (doh.wa.gov)
new window Cheesy Gland Description: Causes, spread, symptoms, and prevention of CLA in sheep and goats. (agspsrv38.agric.wa.gov.au)
new window Illini Biosecurity Website Description: Foot-and-Mouth Disease (FMD), Bovine Spongiform Encepalopathy University of Illinois Extension and Illinois TRAILL's information on biosecurity and livestock diseases that are in the news. (il-traill.outreach.uiuc.edu)
new window Johne's disease Description: Information about bovine (cattle) and ovine (goat) Johne's disease and its control in New South Wales. (agric.nsw.gov.au)
new window Johne's Disease or Paratuberculosis Description: Origin, diagnosis and eradication. (muextension.missouri.edu)
new window Prion Diseases Description: Information about scrapie and other diseases in which a protein is the infective agent. (www-micro.msb.le.ac.uk)
new window Q Fever Pages Description: Links to information about Q fever, a bacterial zoonosis, disease capable of being transmitted from animals to people caused by coxiella burnetii, a rickettsial organism. (ehs.ufl.edu)
new window Rift Valley Fever Description: A mosquito-borne virual disease leading to serious economic losses in livestock, particularly sheep. Transmission, symptoms, related links. (fao.org)
new window Screw-worm Fly Description: Serious threat to pastoral industries, occurs in almost all tropical countries except Australia. Its life cycle and potential impact on cattle, sheep, dogs and humans are described. (agspsrv38.agric.wa.gov.au)
 




Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor






Notes: Healthcyclopedia presents health information in the form of websites and articles that encompass conventional medicine and alternative treatments. Under no circumstances can it recommend or endorse a specific therapy or treatment. Symptoms should always be presented to a doctor for tests, diagnosis and possible treatment. Prescription medication should always be taken under a doctor's care. Also pictures on health websites may occasionally be too graphic for younger viewers.