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    Chapter

    Assessing the Potency of Inactivated Veterinary Vaccines and Oral Live Vaccines Against Rabies

    Vaccination of wildlife and dogs against rabies is the only efficient way to control and prevent the disease in both animals and humans. Vaccines currently in use are either inactivated (for domestic animals b...

    Alexandre Servat, Florence Cliquet, Marine Wasniewski in Rabies and Rabies Vaccines (2020)

  2. Article

    Open Access

    Detection of rabies antibodies in wild boars in north-east Romania by a rabies ELISA test

    In the last few decades, Romania has been considered one of the European countries most affected by animal rabies, but a combination of oral rabies vaccination (ORV) campaigns in foxes alongside mandatory vacc...

    Mihaela Anca Dascalu, Marine Wasniewski, Evelyne Picard-Meyer in BMC Veterinary Research (2019)

  3. Article

    Open Access

    Bat rabies surveillance in France: first report of unusual mortality among serotine bats

    Rabies is a fatal viral encephalitic disease that is caused by lyssaviruses which can affect all mammals, including human and bats. In Europe, bat rabies cases are attributed to five different lyssavirus speci...

    Evelyne Picard-Meyer, Alexandre Servat, Marine Wasniewski in BMC Veterinary Research (2017)

  4. Article

    Isolation of Bokeloh bat lyssavirus in Myotis nattereri in France

    Bokeloh bat lyssavirus (BBLV) was found in Myotis nattereri for the first time in northeastern France in July 2012. The complete genome sequence of the virus from the infected Natterer’s bat was determined by who...

    Evelyne Picard-Meyer, Alexandre Servat, Emmanuelle Robardet in Archives of Virology (2013)