Nicholas Ogden
- Professeur associé
-
Faculté de médecine vétérinaire - Département de pathologie et microbiologie
3190, rue Sicotte - Pavillon de santé publique vétérinaire office 2202-31
Travail 1 : 450 773-8521 #8643
Télécopieur : 450 778-8129
Web : ResearchGate
Web : Site web de l’unité de recherche
Web : LinkedIn
Web : Autre site web
Affiliations
- Membre – GREZOSP — Groupe de recherche en épidémiologie des zoonoses et santé publique
- Membre – CReSP — Centre de recherche en santé publique
Expertises
- Zoonoses
- Microbiology
- Vector-borne Diseases
- Climatic changes
- COVID-19
- COVID19
- Public health
- Veterinary Public Health
- Health risks
- Infection prevention and control
- Epidemiology
- Incidence (Epidemiology)
- Molecular biology
- Food hygiene
- Environnement sain
Responsabilities and outreach Expand all Collapse all
Student supervision Expand all Collapse all
Research projects Expand all Collapse all
Changements du climat naturels et anthropogéniques dans les milieux nordiques: spécificités et impacts sur l'écosystème Projet de recherche au Canada / 2017 - 2019
Wildlife diseases important for human health and food safety in the changing environment of the Eastern Subarctic Projet de recherche au Canada / 2015 - 2019
Wildlifes diseases important for human health and food safety in the changing environment of the Eastern Subarctic Projet de recherche au Canada / 2015 - 2019
Wildlife diseases important for human health and food safety in the changing environment of the Eastern Subarctic Projet de recherche au Canada / 2015 - 2019
CENTRE DE RECHERCHE EN INFECTIOLOGIE PORCINE ET AVICOLE (CRIPA) Projet de recherche au Canada / 2013 - 2019
Évaluation d'un nouveau traitement acaricide oral chez les micromammifères comme une intervention locale pour réduire le risque de la maladie de Lyme au Québec Projet de recherche au Canada / 2016 - 2017
INTERACTIONS ENTRE LES ESPECES DE PETITS MAMMIFERES, LES PARASITES ET LA STRUCTURE DU PAYSAGE, ET CONSEQUENCES SUR L'EMERGENCE DE LA MALADIE DE LYME AU QUEBEC Projet de recherche au Canada / 2011 - 2015
INTERACTIONS ENTRE LES ESPECES DE PETIS MAMMIFERES, LES PARASITES ET LA STRUCTURE DU PAYSAGE, ET CONSEQUENCES SUR L'EMERGENCE DE LA MALADIE DE LYME AU QUEBEC Projet de recherche au Canada / 2011 - 2014
Publications Expand all Collapse all
Rahman S, Shering M, Ogden NH, Lindsay R, Badawi A. Toll-like receptor cascade and gene polymorphism in host-pathogen interaction in Lyme disease. Journal of inflammation research. 2016;9:91-102.
Ogden NH, Lindsay LR. Effects of Climate and Climate Change on Vectors and Vector-Borne Diseases: Ticks Are Different. Trends in parasitology. 2016;32(8):646-56.
Ogden NH, Barker IK, Francis CM, Heagy A, Lindsay LR, Hobson KA. Response to letter regarding article "How far north are migrant birds transporting the tick Ixodes scapularis in Canada? Insights from stable hydrogen isotope analyses of feathers". Ticks and tick-borne diseases. 2016;7(2):329-30.
Mechai S, Margos G, Feil EJ, Barairo N, Lindsay LR, Michel P, et al. Evidence for Host-Genotype Associations of Borrelia burgdorferi Sensu Stricto. PloS one. 2016;11(2):e0149345.
Gabriele-Rivet V, Ogden N, Masse A, Antonation K, Corbett C, Dibernardo A, et al. ECO-EPIZOOTIOLOGIC STUDY OF FRANCISELLA TULARENSIS, THE AGENT OF TULAREMIA, IN QUEBEC WILDLIFE. Journal of wildlife diseases. 2016;52(2):217-29.
Clow KM, Ogden NH, Lindsay LR, Michel P, Pearl DL, Jardine CM. Distribution of Ticks and the Risk of Lyme Disease and Other Tick-Borne Pathogens of Public Health Significance in Ontario, Canada. Vector borne and zoonotic diseases (Larchmont, NY). 2016;16(4):215-22.
Yusa A, Berry P, J JC, Ogden N, Bonsal B, Stewart R, et al. Climate Change, Drought and Human Health in Canada. International journal of environmental research and public health. 2015;12(7):8359-412.
Ogden NH, Lindsay LR, Schofield SW. Methods to Prevent Tick Bites and Lyme Disease. Clinics in laboratory medicine. 2015;35(4):883-99.
Ogden NH, Feil EJ, Leighton PA, Lindsay LR, Margos G, Mechai S, et al. Evolutionary aspects of emerging Lyme disease in Canada. Applied and environmental microbiology. 2015;81(21):7350-9.
Ogden NH, Barker IK, Francis CM, Heagy A, Lindsay LR, Hobson KA. How far north are migrant birds transporting the tick Ixodes scapularis in Canada? Insights from stable hydrogen isotope analyses of feathers. Ticks and tick-borne diseases. 2015;6(6):715-20.
Gabriele-Rivet V, Arsenault J, Badcock J, Cheng A, Edsall J, Goltz J, et al. Different Ecological Niches for Ticks of Public Health Significance in Canada. PloS one. 2015;10(7):e0131282.
Bouchard C, Leonard E, Koffi JK, Pelcat Y, Peregrine A, Chilton N, et al. The increasing risk of Lyme disease in Canada. The Canadian veterinary journal La revue veterinaire canadienne. 2015;56(7):693-9.
Barton-Forbes M, Leonard E, Lindsay LR, Langley JM, Koffi JK, Ogden NH. Tick bites in the Lyme light. Paediatrics & child health. 2015;20(5):237-8.
Simon JA, Marrotte RR, Desrosiers N, Fiset J, Gaitan J, Gonzalez A, et al. Climate change and habitat fragmentation drive the occurrence of Borrelia burgdorferi, the agent of Lyme disease, at the northeastern limit of its distribution. Evolutionary applications. 2014;7(7):750-64.
Parkinson AJ, Evengard B, Semenza JC, Ogden N, Borresen ML, Berner J, et al. Climate change and infectious diseases in the Arctic: establishment of a circumpolar working group. International journal of circumpolar health. 2014;73:25163.
Ogden NH, Radojevic M, Wu X, Duvvuri VR, Leighton PA, Wu J. Estimated effects of projected climate change on the basic reproductive number of the Lyme disease vector Ixodes scapularis. Environmental health perspectives. 2014;122(6):631-8.
Ogden NH, Milka R, Caminade C, Gachon P. Recent and projected future climatic suitability of North America for the Asian tiger mosquito Aedes albopictus. Parasites & vectors. 2014;7:532.
Lewnard JA, Berrang-Ford L, Lwasa S, Namanya DB, Patterson KA, Donnelly B, et al. Relative undernourishment and food insecurity associations with Plasmodium falciparum among Batwa pygmies in Uganda: evidence from a cross-sectional survey. The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene. 2014;91(1):39-49.
Simon A, Rousseau AN, Savary S, Bigras-Poulin M, Ogden NH. Hydrological modelling of Toxoplasma gondii oocysts transport to investigate contaminated snowmelt runoff as a potential source of infection for marine mammals in the Canadian Arctic. Journal of environmental management. 2013;127:150-61.
Simon A, Poulin MB, Rousseau AN, Ogden NH. Fate and transport of Toxoplasma gondii oocysts in seasonally snow covered watersheds: a conceptual framework from a melting snowpack to the Canadian arctic coasts. International journal of environmental research and public health. 2013;10(3):994-1005.
Simon A, Bigras Poulin M, Rousseau AN, Dubey JP, Ogden NH. Spatiotemporal dynamics of Toxoplasma gondii infection in Canadian lynx (Lynx canadensis) in western Quebec, Canada. Journal of wildlife diseases. 2013;49(1):39-48.
Ogden NH, Mechai S, Margos G. Changing geographic ranges of ticks and tick-borne pathogens: drivers, mechanisms and consequences for pathogen diversity. Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology. 2013;3:46.
Mechai S, Feil EJ, Gariepy TD, Gregory TR, Lindsay LR, Millien V, et al. Investigation of the population structure of the tick vector of Lyme disease Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) in Canada using mitochondrial cytochrome C oxidase subunit I gene sequences. Journal of medical entomology. 2013;50(3):560-70.
Bouchard C, Leighton PA, Beauchamp G, Nguon S, Trudel L, Milord F, et al. Harvested white-tailed deer as sentinel hosts for early establishing Ixodes scapularis populations and risk from vector-borne zoonoses in southeastern Canada. Journal of medical entomology. 2013;50(2):384-93.
Bouchard C, Beauchamp G, Leighton PA, Lindsay R, Belanger D, Ogden NH. Does high biodiversity reduce the risk of Lyme disease invasion? Parasites & vectors. 2013;6:195.
Koffi JK, Leighton PA, Pelcat Y, Trudel L, Lindsay LR, Milord F, et al. Passive surveillance for I. scapularis ticks: enhanced analysis for early detection of emerging Lyme disease risk. Journal of medical entomology. 2012;49(2):400-9.
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