Guidelines for porcine models of human bacterial infections

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Guidelines for porcine models of human bacterial infections. / Jensen, Louise K.; Henriksen, Nicole L.; Jensen, Henrik E.

I: Laboratory Animals, Bind 53, Nr. 2, 2019, s. 125-136.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Jensen, LK, Henriksen, NL & Jensen, HE 2019, 'Guidelines for porcine models of human bacterial infections', Laboratory Animals, bind 53, nr. 2, s. 125-136. https://doi.org/10.1177/0023677218789444

APA

Jensen, L. K., Henriksen, N. L., & Jensen, H. E. (2019). Guidelines for porcine models of human bacterial infections. Laboratory Animals, 53(2), 125-136. https://doi.org/10.1177/0023677218789444

Vancouver

Jensen LK, Henriksen NL, Jensen HE. Guidelines for porcine models of human bacterial infections. Laboratory Animals. 2019;53(2):125-136. https://doi.org/10.1177/0023677218789444

Author

Jensen, Louise K. ; Henriksen, Nicole L. ; Jensen, Henrik E. / Guidelines for porcine models of human bacterial infections. I: Laboratory Animals. 2019 ; Bind 53, Nr. 2. s. 125-136.

Bibtex

@article{536f8d60f2894338b0068891668582c2,
title = "Guidelines for porcine models of human bacterial infections",
abstract = "During the last 10 years the number of porcine models for human bacterial infectious diseases has increased. In the future, this tendency is expected to continue and, therefore, the aim of the present review is to describe guidelines for the development and reporting of these models. The guidelines are based on a review of 122 publications of porcine models for different bacterial infectious diseases in humans. The review demonstrates a substantial lack of information in most papers which hampers reproducibility and continuation of the work that was established in the models. The guidelines describe overall principles related to the inoculum, the animal, the infected animal and the post-mortem characterization that are of crucial importance when porcine models of infectious diseases are developed, validated and reported.",
keywords = "animal models, infectious diseases, pigs",
author = "Jensen, {Louise K.} and Henriksen, {Nicole L.} and Jensen, {Henrik E.}",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1177/0023677218789444",
language = "English",
volume = "53",
pages = "125--136",
journal = "Laboratory Animals",
issn = "0023-6772",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Guidelines for porcine models of human bacterial infections

AU - Jensen, Louise K.

AU - Henriksen, Nicole L.

AU - Jensen, Henrik E.

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - During the last 10 years the number of porcine models for human bacterial infectious diseases has increased. In the future, this tendency is expected to continue and, therefore, the aim of the present review is to describe guidelines for the development and reporting of these models. The guidelines are based on a review of 122 publications of porcine models for different bacterial infectious diseases in humans. The review demonstrates a substantial lack of information in most papers which hampers reproducibility and continuation of the work that was established in the models. The guidelines describe overall principles related to the inoculum, the animal, the infected animal and the post-mortem characterization that are of crucial importance when porcine models of infectious diseases are developed, validated and reported.

AB - During the last 10 years the number of porcine models for human bacterial infectious diseases has increased. In the future, this tendency is expected to continue and, therefore, the aim of the present review is to describe guidelines for the development and reporting of these models. The guidelines are based on a review of 122 publications of porcine models for different bacterial infectious diseases in humans. The review demonstrates a substantial lack of information in most papers which hampers reproducibility and continuation of the work that was established in the models. The guidelines describe overall principles related to the inoculum, the animal, the infected animal and the post-mortem characterization that are of crucial importance when porcine models of infectious diseases are developed, validated and reported.

KW - animal models

KW - infectious diseases

KW - pigs

U2 - 10.1177/0023677218789444

DO - 10.1177/0023677218789444

M3 - Review

C2 - 30089438

AN - SCOPUS:85052593220

VL - 53

SP - 125

EP - 136

JO - Laboratory Animals

JF - Laboratory Animals

SN - 0023-6772

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 202338713