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Reproductive Disorders and Leptospirosis: A Case Study in a Mixed-Species Farm (Cattle and Swine)

Animal leptospirosis, exempt in rodents, manifests as peculiar biology where the animal can function, simultaneously or not, as a susceptible host or reservoir. In the first case, clinical symptoms are likely. In the second case, infection is subclinical and manifestations are mild or absent. Mild c...

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Autores principales: Mori, Marcella, Bakinahe, Raïssa, Vannoorenberghe, Philippe, Maris, Jo, de Jong, Ellen, Tignon, Marylène, Marin, Martine, Desqueper, Damien, Fretin, David, Behaeghel, Isabelle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5753644/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29194353
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci4040064
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author Mori, Marcella
Bakinahe, Raïssa
Vannoorenberghe, Philippe
Maris, Jo
de Jong, Ellen
Tignon, Marylène
Marin, Martine
Desqueper, Damien
Fretin, David
Behaeghel, Isabelle
author_facet Mori, Marcella
Bakinahe, Raïssa
Vannoorenberghe, Philippe
Maris, Jo
de Jong, Ellen
Tignon, Marylène
Marin, Martine
Desqueper, Damien
Fretin, David
Behaeghel, Isabelle
author_sort Mori, Marcella
collection PubMed
description Animal leptospirosis, exempt in rodents, manifests as peculiar biology where the animal can function, simultaneously or not, as a susceptible host or reservoir. In the first case, clinical symptoms are likely. In the second case, infection is subclinical and manifestations are mild or absent. Mild clinical symptoms encompass reproductive failure in production animals for host-adapted Leptospira sp. serovars. This work presents a study on Leptospira sp. infection in a mixed-species (bovine and swine) farm with documented reproductive disorders in the cattle unit. A long calving interval (above 450 days) was the hallmark observed in cows. Some cows (2/26 tested) presented a high titre of antibodies against Leptospira sp. serogroup Sejroe, but the overall within-herd prevalence was low (11.5% and 7.7% for cut-off titres of 1:30 and 1:100, respectively). The in-herd prevalence of leptospirosis in the sow unit (determined for 113/140 animals) was high when using a lowered cut-off threshold (32.7% vs. 1.8% for cut-off titre of 1:30 and 1:100, respectively). In this unit, the most prevalent serogroup was Autumnalis. The final diagnostic confirmation of Leptospira sp. maintenance within the farm was obtained through detection by PCR of Leptospira sp. DNA in an aborted swine litter. Despite the fact that a common causative infective agent was diagnosed in both species, the direct link between the two animal units was not found. Factors such as drinking from the same water source and the use of manure prepared with the swine slurry might raise suspicion of a possible cross-contamination between the two units. In conclusion, this work suggests that leptospirosis be included in the differential diagnosis of reproductive disorders and spontaneous abortions in production animals and provides data that justify the use of a lowered threshold cut-off for herd diagnosis.
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spelling pubmed-57536442018-01-08 Reproductive Disorders and Leptospirosis: A Case Study in a Mixed-Species Farm (Cattle and Swine) Mori, Marcella Bakinahe, Raïssa Vannoorenberghe, Philippe Maris, Jo de Jong, Ellen Tignon, Marylène Marin, Martine Desqueper, Damien Fretin, David Behaeghel, Isabelle Vet Sci Article Animal leptospirosis, exempt in rodents, manifests as peculiar biology where the animal can function, simultaneously or not, as a susceptible host or reservoir. In the first case, clinical symptoms are likely. In the second case, infection is subclinical and manifestations are mild or absent. Mild clinical symptoms encompass reproductive failure in production animals for host-adapted Leptospira sp. serovars. This work presents a study on Leptospira sp. infection in a mixed-species (bovine and swine) farm with documented reproductive disorders in the cattle unit. A long calving interval (above 450 days) was the hallmark observed in cows. Some cows (2/26 tested) presented a high titre of antibodies against Leptospira sp. serogroup Sejroe, but the overall within-herd prevalence was low (11.5% and 7.7% for cut-off titres of 1:30 and 1:100, respectively). The in-herd prevalence of leptospirosis in the sow unit (determined for 113/140 animals) was high when using a lowered cut-off threshold (32.7% vs. 1.8% for cut-off titre of 1:30 and 1:100, respectively). In this unit, the most prevalent serogroup was Autumnalis. The final diagnostic confirmation of Leptospira sp. maintenance within the farm was obtained through detection by PCR of Leptospira sp. DNA in an aborted swine litter. Despite the fact that a common causative infective agent was diagnosed in both species, the direct link between the two animal units was not found. Factors such as drinking from the same water source and the use of manure prepared with the swine slurry might raise suspicion of a possible cross-contamination between the two units. In conclusion, this work suggests that leptospirosis be included in the differential diagnosis of reproductive disorders and spontaneous abortions in production animals and provides data that justify the use of a lowered threshold cut-off for herd diagnosis. MDPI 2017-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5753644/ /pubmed/29194353 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci4040064 Text en © 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mori, Marcella
Bakinahe, Raïssa
Vannoorenberghe, Philippe
Maris, Jo
de Jong, Ellen
Tignon, Marylène
Marin, Martine
Desqueper, Damien
Fretin, David
Behaeghel, Isabelle
Reproductive Disorders and Leptospirosis: A Case Study in a Mixed-Species Farm (Cattle and Swine)
title Reproductive Disorders and Leptospirosis: A Case Study in a Mixed-Species Farm (Cattle and Swine)
title_full Reproductive Disorders and Leptospirosis: A Case Study in a Mixed-Species Farm (Cattle and Swine)
title_fullStr Reproductive Disorders and Leptospirosis: A Case Study in a Mixed-Species Farm (Cattle and Swine)
title_full_unstemmed Reproductive Disorders and Leptospirosis: A Case Study in a Mixed-Species Farm (Cattle and Swine)
title_short Reproductive Disorders and Leptospirosis: A Case Study in a Mixed-Species Farm (Cattle and Swine)
title_sort reproductive disorders and leptospirosis: a case study in a mixed-species farm (cattle and swine)
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5753644/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29194353
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci4040064
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