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Periurban outbreaks of bovine calf scours in Northern India caused by Cryptosporidium in association with other enteropathogens

Bovine calf scours reported to be caused by multiple aetiologies resulting in heavy mortality in unweaned calves and huge economic loss to the dairy farmers. Among these, cryptosporidiosis is an emerging waterborne zoonoses and one of the important causes of neonatal calf diarrhoea. Poor immune resp...

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Autores principales: BRAR, A. P. S., SOOD, N. K., KAUR, P., SINGLA, L. D., SANDHU, B. S., GUPTA, K., NARANG, D., SINGH, C. K., CHANDRA, M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7113022/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28784188
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0950268817001224
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author BRAR, A. P. S.
SOOD, N. K.
KAUR, P.
SINGLA, L. D.
SANDHU, B. S.
GUPTA, K.
NARANG, D.
SINGH, C. K.
CHANDRA, M.
author_facet BRAR, A. P. S.
SOOD, N. K.
KAUR, P.
SINGLA, L. D.
SANDHU, B. S.
GUPTA, K.
NARANG, D.
SINGH, C. K.
CHANDRA, M.
author_sort BRAR, A. P. S.
collection PubMed
description Bovine calf scours reported to be caused by multiple aetiologies resulting in heavy mortality in unweaned calves and huge economic loss to the dairy farmers. Among these, cryptosporidiosis is an emerging waterborne zoonoses and one of the important causes of neonatal calf diarrhoea. Poor immune response coupled with primary cryptosporidial infections predispose neonatal calves to multiple secondary infections resulting in their deaths. In the present study, faecal samples from 100 diarrhoeic calves randomly picked up out of 17 outbreaks of bovine calf diarrhoea in periurban Ludhiana, Punjab in Northern India were subjected to conventional (microscopy, modified Zeihl–Neelsen (mZN) staining) and immunological and molecular techniques (faecal antigen capture ELISA and PCR) for detection of primary Cryptosporidium parvum infection as well as other frequently reported concurrent pathogens, viz. rotavirus and coronavirus, Salmonella spp., Escherichia coli, Clostridium perfringens and Eimeria spp. The faecal antigen capture ELISA and PCR revealed 35% prevalence of C. parvum in contrast to 25% by mZN staining with a relatively higher prevalence (66·7%) in younger (8–14-day-old) calves. The detection rate of the other enteropathogens associated with C. parvum was 45·71% for C. perfringens followed by Salmonella spp (40·0%), rotavirus (36·0%), coronavirus (16·0%), E. coli (12·0%) and Eimeria spp (4·0%) The sensitivity for detection of C. parvum by ELISA and mZN staining in comparison to PCR was 97·14% and 72·72%, respectively. An important finding of the study was that C. parvum alone was found in only 10% of the diarrhoeic faecal samples, whereas, majority of the samples (90%) showed mixed infections ranging from a combination of two to five agents. This is the first documentary proof of C. parvum and associated pathogens responsible for severe periurban outbreaks of bovine calf diarrhoea culminating in heavy mortality from Northern India.
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spelling pubmed-71130222020-04-02 Periurban outbreaks of bovine calf scours in Northern India caused by Cryptosporidium in association with other enteropathogens BRAR, A. P. S. SOOD, N. K. KAUR, P. SINGLA, L. D. SANDHU, B. S. GUPTA, K. NARANG, D. SINGH, C. K. CHANDRA, M. Epidemiol Infect Original Papers Bovine calf scours reported to be caused by multiple aetiologies resulting in heavy mortality in unweaned calves and huge economic loss to the dairy farmers. Among these, cryptosporidiosis is an emerging waterborne zoonoses and one of the important causes of neonatal calf diarrhoea. Poor immune response coupled with primary cryptosporidial infections predispose neonatal calves to multiple secondary infections resulting in their deaths. In the present study, faecal samples from 100 diarrhoeic calves randomly picked up out of 17 outbreaks of bovine calf diarrhoea in periurban Ludhiana, Punjab in Northern India were subjected to conventional (microscopy, modified Zeihl–Neelsen (mZN) staining) and immunological and molecular techniques (faecal antigen capture ELISA and PCR) for detection of primary Cryptosporidium parvum infection as well as other frequently reported concurrent pathogens, viz. rotavirus and coronavirus, Salmonella spp., Escherichia coli, Clostridium perfringens and Eimeria spp. The faecal antigen capture ELISA and PCR revealed 35% prevalence of C. parvum in contrast to 25% by mZN staining with a relatively higher prevalence (66·7%) in younger (8–14-day-old) calves. The detection rate of the other enteropathogens associated with C. parvum was 45·71% for C. perfringens followed by Salmonella spp (40·0%), rotavirus (36·0%), coronavirus (16·0%), E. coli (12·0%) and Eimeria spp (4·0%) The sensitivity for detection of C. parvum by ELISA and mZN staining in comparison to PCR was 97·14% and 72·72%, respectively. An important finding of the study was that C. parvum alone was found in only 10% of the diarrhoeic faecal samples, whereas, majority of the samples (90%) showed mixed infections ranging from a combination of two to five agents. This is the first documentary proof of C. parvum and associated pathogens responsible for severe periurban outbreaks of bovine calf diarrhoea culminating in heavy mortality from Northern India. Cambridge University Press 2017-10 2017-08-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7113022/ /pubmed/28784188 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0950268817001224 Text en © Cambridge University Press 2017
spellingShingle Original Papers
BRAR, A. P. S.
SOOD, N. K.
KAUR, P.
SINGLA, L. D.
SANDHU, B. S.
GUPTA, K.
NARANG, D.
SINGH, C. K.
CHANDRA, M.
Periurban outbreaks of bovine calf scours in Northern India caused by Cryptosporidium in association with other enteropathogens
title Periurban outbreaks of bovine calf scours in Northern India caused by Cryptosporidium in association with other enteropathogens
title_full Periurban outbreaks of bovine calf scours in Northern India caused by Cryptosporidium in association with other enteropathogens
title_fullStr Periurban outbreaks of bovine calf scours in Northern India caused by Cryptosporidium in association with other enteropathogens
title_full_unstemmed Periurban outbreaks of bovine calf scours in Northern India caused by Cryptosporidium in association with other enteropathogens
title_short Periurban outbreaks of bovine calf scours in Northern India caused by Cryptosporidium in association with other enteropathogens
title_sort periurban outbreaks of bovine calf scours in northern india caused by cryptosporidium in association with other enteropathogens
topic Original Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7113022/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28784188
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0950268817001224
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