QIAGEN and British Veterinary Laboratories Agency Expand Partnership in Veterinary Testing
New agreement covers widespread bacterial infections in horses
The first target Streptococcus equi is the primary cause of strangles, a respiratory based infection leading to weight loss, swellings, and abscesses, with mortality rates of up to 10 percent. It is one of the most widespread diseases in horses and can persist for several months, thereby leading to severe negative economic impacts incurring from treatment costs and limited activity levels. Klebsiella pneumoniae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa cause Equine metritis (EM), an infection of the genital tract of mares usually passed on through sexual contact. The disease is highly contagious and is detrimental to fertility. This poses a major problem for thoroughbred breeders who are required to have their mares bred by live cover.
“QIAGEN has proven to be a reliable and valuable partner with strong sales channels and a global marketing reach”, said Andrew Soldan, Commercial Programme Manager at the VLA. “We’re looking forward to expanding our collaboration in order to help provide international veterinary testing laboratories access to these advanced technologies and therewith effectively fight some of the most dangerous and costly animal diseases.”
Organizations
Other news from the department science
These products might interest you
Systec H-Series by Systec
Safe, reproducible and validatable sterilization of liquids, solids and waste
Autoclaves with 65-1580 liters usable space, flexibly expandable for various applications
Whatman™ folded filter papers by Cytiva
Whatman folded filter papers
Convenient folded formats speed up your sample preparation
Get the life science industry in your inbox
From now on, don't miss a thing: Our newsletter for biotechnology, pharma and life sciences brings you up to date every Tuesday and Thursday. The latest industry news, product highlights and innovations - compact and easy to understand in your inbox. Researched by us so you don't have to.