USGS logo Yale School of Medicine logo.
The Canary Database
Yale Occupational and Environmental Medicine Program
135 College St
Room 366
New Haven, CT, USA
06510-2283




J Virol 2005 Sep;79(17):11269-79.

Are ducks contributing to the endemicity of highly pathogenic H5N1 influenza virus in Asia?

Sturm-Ramirez KM, Hulse-Post DJ, Govorkova EA, Humberd J, Seiler P, Puthavathana P, Buranathai C, Nguyen TD, Chaisingh A, Long HT, Naipospos TS, Chen H, Ellis TM, Guan Y, Peiris JS, Webster RG

Division of Virology, Department of Infectious Diseases, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN 38105-2794, USA.

Find in a library icon

Article type: Curated - Canary ID: 3145

Cause and Effect Analysis Interspecies susceptibility data Shared exposures with humans Shared outcomes with humans Gene sequence data
Yes No No No No
Study type N Routes Sampling Controls Timing
experimental 14 ingestion, other, inhalation - - -
Exposures H5N1 avian influenza virus
Influenza A Virus, Avian
Outcomes Carrier State
Influenza
Species Mallard duck

Top of page.