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Mortality in East African shorthorn zebu cattle under one year: predictors of infectious-disease mortality

BACKGROUND: Infectious livestock diseases remain a major threat to attaining food security and are a source of economic and livelihood losses for people dependent on livestock for their livelihood. Knowledge of the vital infectious diseases that account for the majority of deaths is crucial in deter...

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Autores principales: Thumbi, Samuel M, Bronsvoort, Mark BMdec, Kiara, Henry, Toye, PG, Poole, Jane, Ndila, Mary, Conradie, Ilana, Jennings, Amy, Handel, Ian G, Coetzer, JAW, Steyl, Johan, Hanotte, Olivier, Woolhouse, Mark EJ
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3848692/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24010500
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-6148-9-175
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author Thumbi, Samuel M
Bronsvoort, Mark BMdec
Kiara, Henry
Toye, PG
Poole, Jane
Ndila, Mary
Conradie, Ilana
Jennings, Amy
Handel, Ian G
Coetzer, JAW
Steyl, Johan
Hanotte, Olivier
Woolhouse, Mark EJ
author_facet Thumbi, Samuel M
Bronsvoort, Mark BMdec
Kiara, Henry
Toye, PG
Poole, Jane
Ndila, Mary
Conradie, Ilana
Jennings, Amy
Handel, Ian G
Coetzer, JAW
Steyl, Johan
Hanotte, Olivier
Woolhouse, Mark EJ
author_sort Thumbi, Samuel M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Infectious livestock diseases remain a major threat to attaining food security and are a source of economic and livelihood losses for people dependent on livestock for their livelihood. Knowledge of the vital infectious diseases that account for the majority of deaths is crucial in determining disease control strategies and in the allocation of limited funds available for disease control. Here we have estimated the mortality rates in zebu cattle raised in a smallholder mixed farming system during their first year of life, identified the periods of increased risk of death and the risk factors for calf mortality, and through analysis of post-mortem data, determined the aetiologies of calf mortality in this population. A longitudinal cohort study of 548 zebu cattle was conducted between 2007 and 2010. Each calf was followed during its first year of life or until lost from the study. Calves were randomly selected from 20 sub-locations and recruited within a week of birth from different farms over a 45 km radius area centered on Busia in the Western part of Kenya. The data comprised of 481.1 calf years of observation. Clinical examinations, sample collection and analysis were carried out at 5 week intervals, from birth until one year old. Cox proportional hazard models with frailty terms were used for the statistical analysis of risk factors. A standardized post-mortem examination was conducted on all animals that died during the study and appropriate samples collected. RESULTS: The all-cause mortality rate was estimated at 16.1 (13.0-19.2; 95% CI) per 100 calf years at risk. The Cox models identified high infection intensity with Theileria spp., the most lethal of which causes East Coast Fever disease, infection with Trypanosome spp., and helminth infections as measured by Strongyle spp. eggs per gram of faeces as the three important infections statistically associated with infectious disease mortality in these calves. Analysis of post-mortem data identified East Coast Fever as the main cause of death accounting for 40% of all deaths, haemonchosis 12% and heartwater disease 7%. CONCLUSION: The findings demonstrate the impact of endemic parasitic diseases in indigenous animals expected to be well adapted against disease pressures. Additionally, agreement between results of Cox models using data from simple diagnostic procedures and results from post-mortem analysis underline the potential use such diagnostic data to reduce calf mortality. The control strategies for the identified infectious diseases have been discussed.
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spelling pubmed-38486922013-12-05 Mortality in East African shorthorn zebu cattle under one year: predictors of infectious-disease mortality Thumbi, Samuel M Bronsvoort, Mark BMdec Kiara, Henry Toye, PG Poole, Jane Ndila, Mary Conradie, Ilana Jennings, Amy Handel, Ian G Coetzer, JAW Steyl, Johan Hanotte, Olivier Woolhouse, Mark EJ BMC Vet Res Research Article BACKGROUND: Infectious livestock diseases remain a major threat to attaining food security and are a source of economic and livelihood losses for people dependent on livestock for their livelihood. Knowledge of the vital infectious diseases that account for the majority of deaths is crucial in determining disease control strategies and in the allocation of limited funds available for disease control. Here we have estimated the mortality rates in zebu cattle raised in a smallholder mixed farming system during their first year of life, identified the periods of increased risk of death and the risk factors for calf mortality, and through analysis of post-mortem data, determined the aetiologies of calf mortality in this population. A longitudinal cohort study of 548 zebu cattle was conducted between 2007 and 2010. Each calf was followed during its first year of life or until lost from the study. Calves were randomly selected from 20 sub-locations and recruited within a week of birth from different farms over a 45 km radius area centered on Busia in the Western part of Kenya. The data comprised of 481.1 calf years of observation. Clinical examinations, sample collection and analysis were carried out at 5 week intervals, from birth until one year old. Cox proportional hazard models with frailty terms were used for the statistical analysis of risk factors. A standardized post-mortem examination was conducted on all animals that died during the study and appropriate samples collected. RESULTS: The all-cause mortality rate was estimated at 16.1 (13.0-19.2; 95% CI) per 100 calf years at risk. The Cox models identified high infection intensity with Theileria spp., the most lethal of which causes East Coast Fever disease, infection with Trypanosome spp., and helminth infections as measured by Strongyle spp. eggs per gram of faeces as the three important infections statistically associated with infectious disease mortality in these calves. Analysis of post-mortem data identified East Coast Fever as the main cause of death accounting for 40% of all deaths, haemonchosis 12% and heartwater disease 7%. CONCLUSION: The findings demonstrate the impact of endemic parasitic diseases in indigenous animals expected to be well adapted against disease pressures. Additionally, agreement between results of Cox models using data from simple diagnostic procedures and results from post-mortem analysis underline the potential use such diagnostic data to reduce calf mortality. The control strategies for the identified infectious diseases have been discussed. BioMed Central 2013-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3848692/ /pubmed/24010500 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-6148-9-175 Text en Copyright © 2013 Thumbi et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Thumbi, Samuel M
Bronsvoort, Mark BMdec
Kiara, Henry
Toye, PG
Poole, Jane
Ndila, Mary
Conradie, Ilana
Jennings, Amy
Handel, Ian G
Coetzer, JAW
Steyl, Johan
Hanotte, Olivier
Woolhouse, Mark EJ
Mortality in East African shorthorn zebu cattle under one year: predictors of infectious-disease mortality
title Mortality in East African shorthorn zebu cattle under one year: predictors of infectious-disease mortality
title_full Mortality in East African shorthorn zebu cattle under one year: predictors of infectious-disease mortality
title_fullStr Mortality in East African shorthorn zebu cattle under one year: predictors of infectious-disease mortality
title_full_unstemmed Mortality in East African shorthorn zebu cattle under one year: predictors of infectious-disease mortality
title_short Mortality in East African shorthorn zebu cattle under one year: predictors of infectious-disease mortality
title_sort mortality in east african shorthorn zebu cattle under one year: predictors of infectious-disease mortality
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3848692/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24010500
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-6148-9-175
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