bursal equivalent tissue - traduction vers arabe
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bursal equivalent tissue - traduction vers arabe

SPECIES OF VIRUS
IBDV; Infectious Bursal Disease virus; Ibdv; Infectious bursal disease virus; Infectious Bursal Disease; Gumboro disease
  • Two enlarged bursae: yellowish grey (right) and haemorrhagic (left)
  • Lesions of kidneys
  • Caseous exudate in bursa of Fabricius
  • Haemorrhages in proventriculus and gizzard

bursal equivalent tissue      
‎ نَسيجٌ مكافىءٌ للجِرَاب‎
milliequivalent         
UNIT OF MEASUREMENT
Milliequivalent; Meq; Meq/L; Meq/l; Molar equivalent; MEq; Milliequivalents; MEq/L; Gram-equivalent
مِيلِّي مُكافِىء
equivalent weight         
  • Beads of an ion-exchange polymer.
  • Jeremias Benjamin Richter (1762–1807), one of the first chemists to publish tables of equivalent weights, and also the coiner of the word "[[stoichiometry]]".
  • Powdered bis(dimethylglyoximate)nickel. This coordination compound can be used for the gravimetric determination of nickel.
  • Burette over a conical flask with [[phenolphthalein]] indicator used for [[acid–base titration]]
IN CHEMISTRY
Equivalent Weight; Equivalent mass; Gram equivalent; Gram-equivalent weight; Equivalent weight (chemistry)
الوزن المكافئ

Définition

tissue paper
¦ noun very thin, soft paper.

Wikipédia

Infectious bursal disease

Infectious bursal disease (IBD), also known as Gumboro disease, infectious bursitis and infectious avian nephrosis, is a highly contagious disease of young chickens and turkeys caused by infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV), characterized by immunosuppression and mortality generally at 3 to 6 weeks of age. The disease was first discovered in Gumboro, Delaware in 1962. It is economically important to the poultry industry worldwide due to increased susceptibility to other diseases and negative interference with effective vaccination. In recent years, very virulent strains of IBDV (vvIBDV), causing severe mortality in chicken, have emerged in Europe, Latin America, South-East Asia, Africa and the Middle East. Infection is via the oro-fecal route, with affected bird excreting high levels of the virus for approximately 2 weeks after infection. The disease is easily spread from infected chickens to healthy chickens through food, water, and physical contact.