Eystein Skjerve
Norwegian University of Life Sciences
234 Papers
1.3K Citations
Eystein Skjerve is an academic researcher from Norwegian University of Life Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Population. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 224 publications. Previous affiliations of Eystein Skjerve include Centers for Disease Control and Prevention & Hawassa University.
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Papers
Seroepidemiological study of livestock brucellosis in a pastoral region
Bekele Megersa,Demelash Biffa,Fufa Abunna,Alemayehu Regassa,Jacques Godfroid,Eystein Skjerve +5 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that cattle are more likely maintenance hosts of Brucella abortus which has spread to goats and camels, and the need for investigating a feasible control intervention and raising public awareness on prevention methods of human exposure to brucellosis is suggested.
Ketamine for prehospital trauma analgesia in a low-resource rural trauma system: a retrospective comparative study of ketamine and opioid analgesia in a ten-year cohort in Iraq
TL;DR: Prehospital analgesia for trauma victims improves physiologic severity indicators in a low-resource trauma system and compared to pentazocine, ketamine was associated with improved blood pressure for patients with serious injuries.
Prevalence of bovine tuberculosis and animal level risk factors for indigenous cattle under different grazing strategies in the livestock/wildlife interface areas of Zambia
Musso Munyeme,John Bwalya Muma,K. L. Samui,Eystein Skjerve,Andrew Nambota,Isaac K. Phiri,Leen Rigouts,Morten Tryland +7 more
TL;DR: BTB was relatively high in the livestock/wildlife interface areas of Lochinvar and Blue Lagoon compared to Kazungula, and should raise a serious public health concern considering the extent to which the communities of the study areas are in contact with their animals and the levels at which they use untreated milk.
Transmission dynamics of pancreas disease (PD) in a Norwegian fjord: aspects of water transport, contact networks and infection pressure among salmon farms.
TL;DR: Using logistic regression analyses, it is found that contact network by water transport explained better transmission of PD than contact networks defined by ownership or close distance to infected farms.
Examination of Genome Homogeneity in Prokaryotes Using Genomic Signatures
Jon Bohlin,Eystein Skjerve +1 more
TL;DR: The less random the oligonucleotide usage is in the sense of higher OUV, the more homogeneous the genome is in terms of the genomic signature, as measured using genomic signatures.