| Actinobacillus| Actinobacillus Brumpt 1910
Animal Pathogens: Several species of Actinobacillus are known pathogens in animals, particularly livestock. They can cause diseases in cattle, pigs, and other animals, leading to conditions such as respiratory infections and septicemia.
Human Infections: While Actinobacillus infections in humans are relatively rare, some species can cause diseases in people, especially in individuals with underlying health conditions or compromised immune systems. Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, for example, has been associated with periodontal diseases.
Respiratory Infections: Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae is a species that can cause pleuropneumonia in pigs, leading to severe respiratory symptoms.
Zoonotic Potential: Some Actinobacillus species have zoonotic potential, meaning they can be transmitted from animals to humans. Human infections may occur through contact with infected animals or their secretions.
Periodontal Diseases: Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, a species found in the oral cavity, has been implicated in periodontal diseases and is associated with aggressive forms of periodontitis.
Septicemia: In animals, particularly cattle, certain species of Actinobacillus can cause septicemia (bloodstream infection).
Antibiotic Sensitivity: The choice of antibiotics for treating Actinobacillus infections depends on the species and the specific infection. Sensitivity testing is typically performed to guide antibiotic therapy.
A lot more information is available when you are logged in and raise the display level
Other Sources for more information:
![]() |
NCBI | Data Punk | End Products Produced |
Different labs use different software to read the sample. See this post for more details.
One lab may say you have none, another may say you have a lot! - This may be solely due to the software they are using to estimate.
We deem lab specific values using values from the KM method for each specific lab to be the most reliable.
Lab | Frequency | UD-Low | UD-High | KM Low | KM High | Lab Low | Lab High | Mean | Median | Standard Deviation | Box Plot Low | Box Plot High | KM Percentile Low | KM Percentile High |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Other Labs | 1.1 | 4 | 19238 | 0 | 10601 | 1807.5 | 110 | 4486.4 | 0 | 1170 | 0 %ile | 100 %ile | ||
biomesight | 51.76 | 0 | 50 | 10 | 2420 | 0 | 2160 | 343.1 | 80 | 927.1 | 0 | 440 | 2.8 %ile | 97.5 %ile |
thorne | 96.55 | 1 | 48 | 0 | 29 | 10.8 | 8 | 9.1 | 2 | 22 | 0 %ile | 100 %ile | ||
thryve | 21.75 | 0 | 13 | 1 | 1199 | 0 | 5964 | 286.2 | 35 | 2896.8 | 7 | 109 | 0 %ile | 99.2 %ile |
ubiome | 11.41 | 0 | 18 | 10821 | 0 | 2717 | 384.9 | 108 | 1189.7 | 0 | 549 | 0 %ile | 100 %ile |
Source of Ranges | Low Boundary | High Boundary | Low Boundary %age | High Boundary %age |
---|---|---|---|---|
PrecisionBiome | 1.5812473066034727E-05 | 0.00013010985276196152 | 0 | 0 |
Thorne (20/80%ile) | 3.9 | 8.85 | 0.0004 | 0.0009 |
Lab | Frequency Seen | Average | Standard Deviation | Sample Count | Lab Samples |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
BiomeSight | 56.768 % | 0.042 % | 0.176 % | 2642.0 | 4654 |
BiomeSightRdp | 32.258 % | 0.004 % | 0.001 % | 10.0 | 31 |
CerbaLab | 66.667 % | 0.002 % | 0.002 % | 2.0 | 3 |
custom | 5.263 % | 0.017 % | 0.031 % | 4.0 | 76 |
es-xenogene | 12.5 % | 0.012 % | 0.006 % | 4.0 | 32 |
Medivere | 62.5 % | 0.104 % | 0.113 % | 5.0 | 8 |
SequentiaBiotech | 20 % | 0.552 % | 0.753 % | 7.0 | 35 |
Thorne | 82.818 % | 0.001 % | 0 % | 241.0 | 291 |
Thryve | 21.387 % | 0.024 % | 0.248 % | 330.0 | 1543 |
uBiome | 11.222 % | 0.038 % | 0.119 % | 90.0 | 802 |
|
And display level must be raised above public.
Data comes from FoodMicrobionet. For the meaning of weight, see that site. The bacteria does not need to be alive to have an effect.