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Pejvak Khaki

Researcher at Razi Vaccine and Serum Research Institute

Publications -  49
Citations -  490

Pejvak Khaki is an academic researcher from Razi Vaccine and Serum Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Leptospira & Salmonella. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 46 publications receiving 417 citations. Previous affiliations of Pejvak Khaki include Maulana Azad Medical College.

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Alginate nanoparticles as a promising adjuvant and vaccine delivery system.

TL;DR: It is concluded that, with regard to the desirable properties of nanoparticles and high immunogenicity, alginate nanoparticles could be considered as a new promising vaccine delivery and adjuvant system.
Journal Article

Comparison of the Effects of Probiotic, Organic Acid and Medicinal Plant on Campylobacter jejuni Challenged Broiler Chickens

TL;DR: The results indicate that these feed additives could be potential treatments for reducing Campylobacter in the intestine of broilers and probiotic and medicinal plant improve growth performance of these birds.
Journal Article

Glanders outbreak at Tehran Zoo, Iran

TL;DR: Active surveillance of Glanders is essential for solipeds, especially it's more important while being used to feed valuable carnivores like lions and tigers, therefore, a reliable test like malleination must be carried out twice (first before transferring and one month after quarantine).
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Epidemilogical analysis of neisseria gonorrhoeae isolates by antimicrobial susceptibility testing, auxotyping and serotyping

TL;DR: Although A/S typing had the highest discriminatory index, isolates recovered from index case and their sexual contacts were found to be identical by all typing methods.
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An epidemiological comparative study on diagnosis of rodent leptospirosis in Mazandaran Province, northern Iran.

TL;DR: Comparing culture assays, the microscopic agglutination test (MAT), polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and nested PCR, for the diagnosis of leptospirosis in rodents in Mazandaran Province, northern Iran found the kidney was a more suitable site for identifyingLeptospiral DNA by n-PCR than urine.