Annual Report
of the
Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory
Fiscal Year 1998
Office of
Agricultural Research Programs
PurdueUniversity
This is the eighteenth annual report of the activities of
the Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory.
The Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory (ADDL) consists
of the central ADDL at West Lafayette (ADDL-WL) and the southern
branch of the ADDL at Southern Indiana Purdue Agricultural
Center. The ADDL originated as an ancillary service of the
testing laboratory for vaccines and antisera to be used for
the prevention and control of Hog Cholera in Indiana
in 1912. Testing for Brucellosis (Bangs Disease) was
added in the early 1930s. The official ADDL was established
in Section 1, Chapter 68 of the Acts of the Indiana Legislature
of 1945. The branch laboratory (ADDL-SIPAC) began in 1969
as a diagnostic laboratory to serve the poultry industry in
southern Indiana.
Additional facilities at ADDL-SIPAC were completed in 1977
to provide mammalian diagnostic services. Construction of
the new ADDL-WL facilities began in 1989 and was completed
and dedicated June 11, 1991.
The ADDL system is dedicated to reducing animal suffering,
helping control the states multi-million dollar losses
from animal disease and parasites, reducing the threat of
disease and poisonings common to animals and man, aiding in
research, education, and diagnostic service in veterinary
medicine, and assisting in ensuring a nutritious and disease
free source of animal derived food and products to consumers.
The Laboratories objectives are to provide accurate
and prompt diagnostic service to veterinary practitioners,
animal producers, companion animal owners, wildlife conservationists,
animal researchers, and state/federal regulatory officials.
Various sections of the ADDL system that work in concert to
achieve these objectives include avian diseases, bacteriology,
computer services, pathology, serology, toxicology and virology
sections. The ADDL is accredited as a full service, all species
veterinary medical diagnostic laboratory by the American Association
of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians.
ADDL-SIPAC is located between Ind. 56 and Ind. 164 in eastern
DuboisCounty
on the Southern Indiana Purdue Agriculture Center. The ADDL-WL
is located on the main campus of PurdueUniversity
adjacent to the School
of Veterinary Medicine.
The primary clientele for the services of the ADDL are the
livestock and poultry producers of the state as well as owners
of companion animals, all of whom have benefited from the
diagnostic services provided by the ADDL. Accomplishments
of the ADDL include assistance to producers in diagnosing
and controlling disease problems, providing serological services
required for sale, exhibition and exportation, and providing
research assistance to evaluating previously and newly recognized
animal diseases.
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