1. Non specific serological reactions in the diagnosis of bovine brucellosis: experimental oral infection of cattle with repeated doses of Yersinia enterocolitica O:9
- Author
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Guillaume Gerbier, Marisa da Costa, Bruno Garin-Bastuji, Régis Pouillot, Jean-Jacques Fontaine, Christiane Cau, and Nathalie Hummel
- Subjects
Yersinia Infections ,Colony Count, Microbial ,Prevalence ,Cattle Diseases ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Brucella ,Microbiology ,Brucellosis ,Serology ,Feces ,Agglutination Tests ,Direct agglutination test ,medicine ,Animals ,False Positive Reactions ,Yersinia enterocolitica ,Fluorescent Dyes ,Antigens, Bacterial ,Rose Bengal ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Complement Fixation Tests ,General Medicine ,Complement fixation test ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Cattle ,Female - Abstract
Eight heifers were orally infected with 4 x 10(9) colony forming units of a field cattle strain of Yersinia enterocolitica O:9 in a capsule, 5 days a week, for about 9 weeks (day 0-day 64 (D0-D64). The faecal shedding of Y. enterocolitica O:9 began on D5 for seven out of the eight challenged cattle with a high level of excretion during the first month, followed by a decrease till the day of slaughter (D76). Y. enterocolitica O:9 was not isolated from organs collected at slaughter. No clinical symptoms were observed. Hyperplasia of intestinal lymph formations was the sole microscopic lesions observed. Five animals showed a serological reaction against Brucella antigens in at least one of the following tests: Rose-Bengal test, complement fixation test, tube agglutination test or indirect ELISA (iELISA) tests. Only one animal showed a high level of serological response and a positive reaction in the dithiothreitol-microagglutination test. The observed variability in terms of individual sensitivity to the Y. enterocolitica O:9 infection is in agreement with the low individual prevalence rate and the transient serological reaction and faecal Y. entercolitica O:9 shedding observed in herds showing false positive serological reactions in brucellosis.
- Published
- 1999
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