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Definition of Fowl cholera
1. Noun. An acute diarrheal disease (especially of chickens) caused by the microorganism that causes hemorrhagic septicemia.
Medical Definition of Fowl cholera
1. A destructive disease of domestic fowls caused by Pasteurella multocida. (05 Mar 2000)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fowl Cholera
Literary usage of Fowl cholera
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Journal of Experimental Medicine by Rockefeller University, Rockefeller Institute, Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research (1898)
"8 of the Bureau of Animal Industry there is to be found a very careful study
of "Three Outbreaks of fowl cholera" by Dr. VA Moore. ..."
2. Journal of the Royal Microscopical Society by Royal Microscopical Society, London (1882)
"New Method of Vaccination for Fowl-cholera, f—H. Toussaint supplements M.
Pasteur's researches in this subject by experiments showing new methods of ..."
3. Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association by American Veterinary Medical Association. (1917)
"There is a wide difference between natural and artificial infection, and apparently
there is an unknown factor at work in natural fowl cholera outbreaks, ..."
4. Report of the Secretary of Agriculture by United States Dept. of Agriculture (1881)
"INVESTIGATIONS OF SWINE PLAGUE AND fowl cholera. ... undertaken by your authority,
of the diseases known as the swine plague and fowl cholera. ..."
5. A Text-book of the Diseases of the Small Domestic Animals by Oscar Victor Brumley (1921)
"fowl cholera. Cholera Gallinarum. Pasteurellosis Arium. Fowl Typhoid. Definition.—This
is an acute contagious disease of fowls, usually occurring in an ..."
6. Special pathology and therapeutics of the diseases of domestic animals v. 2 by Ferenc Hutyra (1912)
"fowl cholera is an acute, contagious and usually an epizootic affection of fowls,
particularly of chickens, geese and ducks, and is manifested in a general ..."
7. Microbes, Ferments and Moulds by Édouard Louis Trouessart (1886)
"Duclaux cites the following fact in his book, Ferments et Maladies:—"If a fowl
is inoculated with a few drops from a culture of fowl cholera, ..."
8. Recent Essays by Various Authors on Bacteria in Relation to Disease by Sir 1st Bart William Watson Cheyne, William Watson Cheyne (1886)
"I.-THE ATTENUATION OF THE VIRUS OF FOWL-CHOLERA,« AMONO the various facts which
I have had the honour of communicating to the Academy regarding the disease ..."