1. Toxoplasma gondii seroprevalence in wild boars (Sus scrofa) in Sweden and evaluation of ELISA test performance.
- Author
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Wallander C, Frössling J, Vågsholm I, Uggla A, and Lundén A
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Agglutination Tests veterinary, Animals, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay veterinary, Geography, Meat parasitology, Prevalence, Seasons, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Sweden epidemiology, Swine, Swine Diseases parasitology, Toxoplasma immunology, Toxoplasmosis, Animal parasitology, Antibodies, Protozoan blood, Swine Diseases epidemiology, Swine Diseases immunology, Toxoplasma isolation & purification, Toxoplasmosis, Animal epidemiology, Toxoplasmosis, Animal immunology
- Abstract
Toxoplasma gondii is a zoonotic protozoan parasite, infecting a wide range of warm-blooded animals. The Swedish wild boar population is expanding and increased hunting provides its meat to a growing group of consumers. We performed a spatio-temporal investigation of T. gondii seroprevalence in Swedish wild boars. An ELISA was set up and evaluated against a commercial direct agglutination test, using Bayesian latent class analysis. The ELISA sensitivity and specificity were estimated to 79% and 85%, respectively. Of 1327 serum samples, 50% were positive. Thirty-four per cent of young wild boars and 55% of adults were positive (P < 0.001). The total seroprevalence ranged from 72% in 2005 to 38% in 2011 (P < 0.001), suggesting a declining trend. The highest seroprevalence, 65%, was recorded in South Sweden. In other regions it varied from 29% in Stockholm to 46% in East Middle Sweden.
- Published
- 2015
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