
doi: 10.1136/vr.f1329
AS part of a validation of an established test for the detection of canine babesiosis in blood samples, the AHVLA has tested a random panel of blood samples originally submitted for testing for a range of canine diseases unrelated to babesiosis. Of 50 samples tested, 49 were negative for Babesia species, but one sample produced a faint band of approximately 400 base pairs (bps), equivalent in size to that of a Babesia gibsoni control sample. Subsequent DNA sequencing generated 387 bps …
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