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New research from UC Berkeley and UC Davis suggests that knowing when and where dogs get sick can help us know when humans ...
Valley fever is common in animals, especially dogs that dig in dirt. The study, published in the Journal of Infectious Diseases, examined nearly 835,000 blood antibody tests from dogs that had ...
Knowing when and where dogs got sick with Valley fever can help pinpoint the geographical areas where humans might also contract the disease, according to a paper recently published in The Journal ...
Arizona health officials reported nearly 11,000 cases of Valley fever in 2023. But, new research suggests dogs may be able to ...
Valley fever cases are expected to increase in 2025, particularly in California, raising public health concerns. A recent study reveals a strong link between the disease in dogs and humans ...
Skin lesions of a dog with coccidioidomycosis, also known as valley fever. (photo courtesy of VFCE) Knowing when and where dogs got sick with Valley fever can help pinpoint the geographical areas ...
But Valley fever is also common in animals, particularly dogs that dig in the dirt, according to researchers from the University of California, who published a study on Thursday in the Journal of ...
“We have this kind of incomplete picture … dogs fill that gap really well.” Valley fever is a disease with a foothold in the American Southwest and Washington caused by a fungus that takes ...
Then the government stopped the study 20 attorneys general ask federal judge to reverse deep cuts to US Health and Human Services Knowing when and where dogs got sick with Valley fever can help ...
Along with colleagues at UC Berkeley, Sykes mapped positive results by location and found that the presence of Valley fever in dogs surged from just 2.4 percent of U.S. counties in 2012 to 12.4 ...