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Brucellosis, also called undulant fever, or Malta fever, is a highly contagious zoonosis caused by ingestion of unsterilized milk or meat from infected animals, or close contact with their secretions. Brucella spp. are small, gram-negative, non-motile, non-spore-forming rods, which function as facultative intracellular parasites that cause chronic disease, which usually persists for life. Brucellosis has been recognized in both animals and humans since the 19th century.
The disease now called brucellosis, under the name “Mediterranean fever”, first came to the attention of British medical officers in Malta during the Crimean War in the 1850s. The causal relationship between organism and disease was first established by Dr. David Bruce in 1887.[1][2]
In 1897 Danish veterinarian Bernhard Bang isolated Brucella abortus as the agent and the additional name Bang’s disease was assigned. In modern usage “Bang’s disease” is often shortened to just “bangs” when ranchers discuss the disease or vaccine.
Maltese doctor and archaeologist Sir Temi Zammit identified unpasteurized milk as the major source of the pathogen in 1905, and it has since become known as Malta Fever, or deni rqiq locally. In cattle this disease is also known as contagious abortion and infectious abortion.
The popular name “undulant fever” originates from the characteristic undulance (or “wave-like” nature) of the fever which rises and falls over weeks in untreated patients. In the 20th Century, this name, along with “brucellosis” (after Brucella, named for Dr Bruce), gradually replaced the 19th Century names “Mediterranean fever” and “Malta fever”.
In 1989, Saudi Arabian neurologists discovered neurobrucellosis, a neurological involvement in brucellosis.[3][4]
Species infecting domestic livestock are B. melitensis (goats and sheep), B. suis (pigs, see Swine brucellosis), B. abortus (cattle and bison), B. ovis (sheep), and B. canis (dogs). B. abortus also infects bison and elk in North America and B. suis is endemic in caribou. Brucella species have also been isolated from several marine mammal species (pinnipeds and cetaceans.)

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