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The Third International Conference on Haemophilus, Actinobacillus,
and Pasteurella (HAP94) was held in July and August at the
Edinburgh Conference Centre, Heriot-Watt University, Riccarton
Campus, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK. Previous conferences in 1981,
Copenhagen, and 1989, Guelph, had indicated widespread interest in
this group of pathogenic bacteria and the timing of the Edinburgh
conference was prompted by the major advances in our knowledge of
the HAP group that had occurred in the five years since the Guelph
meeting. These organisms are considered as a group because of their
close relationship in an evolutionary sense and because of the
similarities in the types of diseases that they preduce. The main
objectives of the meeting were to review and discuss current
knowledge and present experimental findings relating to the
fundamental, applied, clinical, and therapeutic aspects of disease
research involving the HAP group of organisms. HAP 94 was attended
by 160 delegates from around the world and included many of the
foremost researchers studying HAP organisms. The conference was
structured around 16 talks from invited speakers who covered key
areas of HAP research including taxonomy, mechanisms of
pathogenesis, animal disease models, virulence factors, molecular
biology, immunolgy, antigen analyses, and experimental and
commercial vaccine development. The talks provided a review of the
current state of research in each field and allowed each speaker to
focus on his or her personal research interests.
The Third International Conference on Haemophilus, Actinobacillus,
and Pasteurella (HAP94) was held in July and August at the
Edinburgh Conference Centre, Heriot-Watt University, Riccarton
Campus, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK. Previous conferences in 1981,
Copenhagen, and 1989, Guelph, had indicated widespread interest in
this group of pathogenic bacteria and the timing of the Edinburgh
conference was prompted by the major advances in our knowledge of
the HAP group that had occurred in the five years since the Guelph
meeting. These organisms are considered as a group because of their
close relationship in an evolutionary sense and because of the
similarities in the types of diseases that they preduce. The main
objectives of the meeting were to review and discuss current
knowledge and present experimental findings relating to the
fundamental, applied, clinical, and therapeutic aspects of disease
research involving the HAP group of organisms. HAP 94 was attended
by 160 delegates from around the world and included many of the
foremost researchers studying HAP organisms. The conference was
structured around 16 talks from invited speakers who covered key
areas of HAP research including taxonomy, mechanisms of
pathogenesis, animal disease models, virulence factors, molecular
biology, immunolgy, antigen analyses, and experimental and
commercial vaccine development. The talks provided a review of the
current state of research in each field and allowed each speaker to
focus on his or her personal research interests.
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