Glanders

Glanders
Other namesEquinia, farcy,[1] malleus[2]
The design of the water trough inhibits the dissemination of glanders disease among the watering horses, Philadelphia, Penn., U.S., 1917.
SpecialtyInfectious diseases, veterinary medicine Edit this on Wikidata


Glanders is a contagious, zoonotic infectious disease caused by the bacterium Burkholderia mallei, which primarily occurs in horses, mules, and donkeys, but can also be contracted by dogs and cats, pigs, goats, and human beings. The term glanders derives from the Middle English word glaundres and from the Old French word glandres, which both denote glands.[3] Other terms for the glanders disease are the Latin: malleus, the Spanish: muermo, the German: Rotz, and the Norwegian: snive.

Glanders is endemic in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Central and South America. Elsewhere, glanders has been eradicated in North America, Australia, and most of Europe, by way of the zoological observation and destruction of infected and sick animals and quarantine restrictions upon the importation of said animals. Occurrences of glanders have not been reported in the U.S. since 1945, until a laboratory accident in 2000, wherein a laboratory researcher was accidentally exposed the Burkholderia mallei bacterium.[4] In the U.K., glanders is a notifiable disease, and there have been no occurrences reported since 1928.[5]

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