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Bovine tuberculosis visible lesions in cattle culled during herd breakdowns: the effects of individual characteristics, trade movement and co-infection
by
Skuce, Robin
, Graham, Jordon
, McNair, Jim
, Byrne, Andrew W.
, Donaghy, Aoibheann
, Brown, Craig
, Allen, Adrian
, McDowell, Stanley
, Guelbenzu-Gonzalo, Maria
in
Animals
/ Beef cattle
/ Biological response modifiers
/ Bovine TB
/ bovine tuberculosis
/ Bovine viral diarrhea virus 1
/ BVDV
/ Case-Control Studies
/ Cattle
/ Co-infection
/ Coinfection - epidemiology
/ Coinfection - veterinary
/ Comparative analysis
/ data collection
/ Epidemiology
/ Fasciola hepatica
/ herds
/ Interferon
/ Liver
/ Liver fluke
/ liver flukes
/ livestock and meat industry
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ mixed infection
/ Mycobacterium bovis
/ necropsy
/ Northern Ireland
/ Northern Ireland - epidemiology
/ odds ratio
/ Paratuberculosis
/ public health and modelling
/ Research Article
/ Retrospective Studies
/ reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction
/ risk
/ Skin
/ slaughter
/ trade
/ Transgenics
/ tuberculin
/ Tuberculosis
/ Tuberculosis, Bovine - diagnosis
/ Tuberculosis, Bovine - epidemiology
/ Tuberculosis, Bovine - pathology
/ veterinary medicine
/ Veterinary Medicine/Veterinary Science
/ Zoology
2017
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Bovine tuberculosis visible lesions in cattle culled during herd breakdowns: the effects of individual characteristics, trade movement and co-infection
by
Skuce, Robin
, Graham, Jordon
, McNair, Jim
, Byrne, Andrew W.
, Donaghy, Aoibheann
, Brown, Craig
, Allen, Adrian
, McDowell, Stanley
, Guelbenzu-Gonzalo, Maria
in
Animals
/ Beef cattle
/ Biological response modifiers
/ Bovine TB
/ bovine tuberculosis
/ Bovine viral diarrhea virus 1
/ BVDV
/ Case-Control Studies
/ Cattle
/ Co-infection
/ Coinfection - epidemiology
/ Coinfection - veterinary
/ Comparative analysis
/ data collection
/ Epidemiology
/ Fasciola hepatica
/ herds
/ Interferon
/ Liver
/ Liver fluke
/ liver flukes
/ livestock and meat industry
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ mixed infection
/ Mycobacterium bovis
/ necropsy
/ Northern Ireland
/ Northern Ireland - epidemiology
/ odds ratio
/ Paratuberculosis
/ public health and modelling
/ Research Article
/ Retrospective Studies
/ reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction
/ risk
/ Skin
/ slaughter
/ trade
/ Transgenics
/ tuberculin
/ Tuberculosis
/ Tuberculosis, Bovine - diagnosis
/ Tuberculosis, Bovine - epidemiology
/ Tuberculosis, Bovine - pathology
/ veterinary medicine
/ Veterinary Medicine/Veterinary Science
/ Zoology
2017
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Bovine tuberculosis visible lesions in cattle culled during herd breakdowns: the effects of individual characteristics, trade movement and co-infection
by
Skuce, Robin
, Graham, Jordon
, McNair, Jim
, Byrne, Andrew W.
, Donaghy, Aoibheann
, Brown, Craig
, Allen, Adrian
, McDowell, Stanley
, Guelbenzu-Gonzalo, Maria
in
Animals
/ Beef cattle
/ Biological response modifiers
/ Bovine TB
/ bovine tuberculosis
/ Bovine viral diarrhea virus 1
/ BVDV
/ Case-Control Studies
/ Cattle
/ Co-infection
/ Coinfection - epidemiology
/ Coinfection - veterinary
/ Comparative analysis
/ data collection
/ Epidemiology
/ Fasciola hepatica
/ herds
/ Interferon
/ Liver
/ Liver fluke
/ liver flukes
/ livestock and meat industry
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ mixed infection
/ Mycobacterium bovis
/ necropsy
/ Northern Ireland
/ Northern Ireland - epidemiology
/ odds ratio
/ Paratuberculosis
/ public health and modelling
/ Research Article
/ Retrospective Studies
/ reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction
/ risk
/ Skin
/ slaughter
/ trade
/ Transgenics
/ tuberculin
/ Tuberculosis
/ Tuberculosis, Bovine - diagnosis
/ Tuberculosis, Bovine - epidemiology
/ Tuberculosis, Bovine - pathology
/ veterinary medicine
/ Veterinary Medicine/Veterinary Science
/ Zoology
2017
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Bovine tuberculosis visible lesions in cattle culled during herd breakdowns: the effects of individual characteristics, trade movement and co-infection
Journal Article
Bovine tuberculosis visible lesions in cattle culled during herd breakdowns: the effects of individual characteristics, trade movement and co-infection
2017
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Overview
Background
Bovine tuberculosis (bTB), caused by
Mycobacterium bovis
, remains a significant problem for livestock industries in many countries worldwide including Northern Ireland, where a test and slaughter regime has utilised the Single Intradermal Comparative Cervical Tuberculin (SICCT) test since 1959.
We investigated the variation in post-mortem confirmation based on bTB visible lesion (VL) presence during herd breakdowns using two model suites. We investigated animal-level characteristics, while controlling for herd-level factors and clustering. We were interested in potential impacts of concurrent infection, and therefore we assessed whether animals with evidence of liver fluke infection (
Fasciola hepatica
; post-mortem inspection),
M. avium
reactors (animals with negative
M. bovis-avium
(
b-a
) tuberculin reactions) or Bovine Viral Diarrhoea Virus (BVDV; RT-PCR tested) were associated with bTB confirmation.
Results
The dataset included 6242 animals removed during the 14 month study period (2013–2015). bTB-VL presence was significantly increased in animals with greater
b-a
reaction size at the disclosing SICCT test (e.g.
b-a
= 5-9 mm vs.
b-a =
0 mm, adjusted Odds ratio (aOR): 14.57;
p
< 0.001).
M. avium
reactor animals (
b-a
< 0) were also significantly more likely to disclose VL than non-reactor animals (
b-a =
0; aOR: 2.29;
p
= 0.023). Animals had a greater probability of exhibiting lesions with the increasing number of herds it had resided within (movement; log-herds: aOR: 2.27–2.42;
p
< 0.001), if it had an inconclusive penultimate test result (aOR: 2.84–3.89;
p
< 0.001), and with increasing time between tests (log-time; aOR: 1.23;
p
= 0.003). Animals were less likely to have VL if they were a dairy breed (aOR: 0.79;
p
= 0.015) or in an older age-class (e.g. age-quartile 2 vs. 4; aOR: 0.65;
p
< 0.001). Liver fluke or BVDV variables were not retained in either multivariable model as they were non-significantly associated with bTB-VL status (
p
> 0.1).
Conclusions
Our results suggest that neither co-infection of liver fluke nor BVDV had a significant effect on the presence of VLs in this high-risk cohort.
M. avium
tuberculin reactors had a significantly increased risk of disclosing with a bTB lesion, which could be related to the impact of co-infection with
M. avium
subsp.
paratuberculosis
(MAP) affecting the performance of the SICCT however further research in this area is required. Movements, test history, breed and age were important factors influencing confirmation in high-risk animals.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,BMC
Subject
/ Biological response modifiers
/ Bovine viral diarrhea virus 1
/ BVDV
/ Cattle
/ herds
/ Liver
/ Medicine
/ necropsy
/ Northern Ireland - epidemiology
/ reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction
/ risk
/ Skin
/ trade
/ Tuberculosis, Bovine - diagnosis
/ Tuberculosis, Bovine - epidemiology
/ Tuberculosis, Bovine - pathology
/ Veterinary Medicine/Veterinary Science
/ Zoology
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