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Volume 12, Number 2, February 2006

Surveillance for Prion Disease in Cervids, Germany

Elvira Schettler,* Falko Steinbach,*† Iris Eschenbacher-Kaps,‡ Kirsten Gerst,§ Franz Meussdoerffer,¶ Kirsten Risch,§ Wolf Jürgen Streich,* and Kai Frölich*
*Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Berlin, Germany; †Veterinary Laboratories Agency, Weybridge, United Kingdom; ‡Cenas AG, Kulmbach, Germany; §Landesveterinär- und Lebensmitteluntersuchungsamt Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Rostock, Germany; and ¶University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth, Germany

 
 
Figure.
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Figure. Distribution of free-ranging roe deer, red deer, and fallow deer tested for transmissible spongiform encephalopathies that shows the risk for each district where samples were obtained. , samples originating from a district without any risk attributes; , samples originating from a district where BSE incidence in cattle was higher than average BSE incidence in Germany; , samples originating from a district with occurrence of scrapie in domestic sheep; , samples from red deer originating from a district with high red deer density; , fallow deer samples originating from a district with high fallow deer density; n, number of samples from each federal state. Samples came from 14 (88%) of the 16 federal states (2 missing states are 2 major cities with almost no deer population) and from 280 (87%) of the 323 German administrative districts.

 

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This page last reviewed January 4, 2006

Emerging Infectious Diseases Journal
National Center for Infectious Diseases
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention