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- Q267036 subject Q15284592.
- Q267036 subject Q8269079.
- Q267036 subject Q8308653.
- Q267036 subject Q8735801.
- Q267036 abstract "Schmallenberg virus is the informal name given to a recently isolated orthobunyavirus, which has not been given a formal name as of Template:MONTHNAME 2013[[Category:Articles containing potentially dated statements from Template:MONTHNAME 2013]], initially reported in November 2011 to cause congenital malformations and stillbirths in cattle, sheep, goats, and possibly alpaca. It appears to be transmitted by midges (Culicoides spp.) which are likely to have been most active in causing the infection in the northern hemisphere summer and autumn of 2011, with animals subsequently giving birth from late 2011. Schmallenberg virus falls in the Simbu serogroup of Orthobunyaviruses; as of January 2013, it is considered to be most closely related to the Sathuperi and Douglas viruses.The virus is named after Schmallenberg, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, from where the first definitive sample was derived. After Germany, it has also been detected in the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Luxembourg, Italy, Spain, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, Ireland, Finland, Denmark, Sweden, Austria, Norway, Poland and Estonia.The virus has been recognised by the European Commission's Standing Committee on the Food Chain and Animal Health and the Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut (German Research Institute for Animal Health). A risk assessment in December 2011 did not consider it likely to be a threat to human health, as other comparable viruses are not zoonotic.Immunity can possibly be acquired naturally against SBV. It is possible that the seasonality of the infection cycle would not entail a second epidemic circulation next year, due to the shortness of the viraemic period (about 4 to 6 days post exposure, longer in affected foetuses). Vaccination is a possible option for controlling the disease as a vaccine exists for the similar Akabane virus. In March 2012, scientists of the Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut first succeeded in producing an electron microscope image of the Schmallenberg virus.".
- Q267036 family Q1010102.
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- Q267036 thumbnail Schmallenberg_distribution_map.png?width=300.
- Q267036 wikiPageExternalLink hahnkc_ss15.pdf.
- Q267036 wikiPageExternalLink SBV_EE_February%202014.pdf.
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- Q267036 wikiPageExternalLink PMC3663787.
- Q267036 wikiPageExternalLink A_Schmallenberg_virus.pdf.
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- Q267036 familia "Bunyaviridae".
- Q267036 genus "Orthobunyavirus".
- Q267036 name "Schmallenberg virus".
- Q267036 type Species.
- Q267036 type Thing.
- Q267036 comment "Schmallenberg virus is the informal name given to a recently isolated orthobunyavirus, which has not been given a formal name as of Template:MONTHNAME 2013[[Category:Articles containing potentially dated statements from Template:MONTHNAME 2013]], initially reported in November 2011 to cause congenital malformations and stillbirths in cattle, sheep, goats, and possibly alpaca.".
- Q267036 label "Schmallenberg virus".
- Q267036 depiction Schmallenberg_distribution_map.png.
- Q267036 name "Schmallenberg virus".