About the Pathobiology Department
Historical Perspective on the Department of Animal Diseases
Currently
The Department of Pathobiology and Veterinary Science
Dr. Edwin L. Jungherr, an Austrian veterinary
pathologist was the first head of the Department of Animal Diseases. The
department was created as an independent unit within the College of
Agriculture in 1923. What follows is a synopsis of important discoveries
that were published in peer-reviewed journals from that time forward to the
present.
1935
Jungherr describes fowl paralysis, a form of herpesvirus-induced
leukosis, a neurolymphoma.
1936
Wayne Plastridge, a microbiologist with the department, describes
infectious bovine mastitis and works to create a control program.
1936
Jungherr defines encephalomalacia in chicks, demonstrating that it
occurs as a consequence of vitamin E deficiency (published in Science)
1945
Jungherr characterizes the lesions of Vitamin A deficiency in
poultry chicks.
1950
Plastridge reports successful antibiotic treatment of Vibrio fetus,
an infectious cause of abortion in cattle.
1953
Jungherr, Roy Luginbuhl, and Charles Helmboldt recognize that
pheasants serve as sentinel species for eastern equine encephalomyelitis, a
serious fatal viral disease of horses and humans.
1953
Helmboldt and Jungherr define the lesions of vitamin A deficiency in
calves
1954
Jungherr, Luginbuhl, and Mark Tourtellotte define clinical,
microbiologic, serologic and histologic features of PPLO (later designated
Mycoplasma) infections of poultry.
1958
Helmboldt defines the histopathology of Aleutian mink disease (later
shown to be caused by a parvovirus).
1958
Jungherr publishes a 45 page treatis on equine eastern
encephalomyelitis in the American Journal of Hygiene.
1959
Jungherr defines bacterial arthritis and tenosynovitis in poultry.
1960
Tourtellotte defines serologic tests for recognizing Mycoplasma
gallisepticum infectious in poultry.
1961
Helmboldt and Wayne Plastridge define bovine Mycoplasma
mastitis.
1969
Luginbuhl invents Specific Pathogen Free eggs for use in laboratories
throughout the world.
1975
Herbert Van Kruiningen describes the ultrastructure of granulomatous
colitis of Boxer dogs.
1976
Svend Neilsen defines the pathology of methylmercury poisoning in
swine, later in cats and canines as well.
1976
Tom Yang reports on canine transmissible venereal sarcoma.
1977
Jeff Iltis, Willard Daniels and Stu Wyand demonstrate an adenovirus
as the cause of marble spleen disease in pheasants.
1978
Yang reports features of grey Collie syndrome (cyclic neutropenia).
1979
Wyand describes streptococcal septicemia in racing Greyhound dogs.
1985
John Sundberg, David Hill and Nielsen define the histology and electron
microscopy of cutaneous fibroma in white-tailed deer.
1986 John Post defines a
serologic test for Lyme disease in animals.
1987
Van Kruiningen identifies a coronavirus as the cause of winter
dysentery of dairy cattle.
1999
Richard French, Antonio Garmendia and Van Kruiningen contribute to
the isolation of West Nile virus from crows in Connecticut (published in
Science).
2000
Garmendia and Van Kruiningen recover the West Nile Virus from a hawk
in midwinter.
2003 Steve Geary and a team of investigators define the
complete genome of Mycoplasma gallisepticum.
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