9 results on '"Staubli D"'
Search Results
2. Immunodiagnosis of Besnoitia besnoiti infection by ELISA and Western blot
- Author
-
Cortes, H.C.E., primary, Nunes, S., additional, Reis, Y., additional, Staubli, D., additional, Vidal, R., additional, Sager, H., additional, Leitão, A., additional, and Gottstein, B., additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Untersuchung von bovinem Sperma auf Neospora caninum-DNA mittels PCR
- Author
-
Staubli, D., primary, Iten, C., additional, Kneubühler, J., additional, Sager, H., additional, Müller, N., additional, and Gottstein, P., additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Incidence of Neospora caninum and other intestinal protozoan parasites in populations of Swiss dogs
- Author
-
Sager, H., primary, Moret, C. Steiner, additional, Müller, N., additional, Staubli, D., additional, Esposito, M., additional, Schares, G., additional, Hässig, M., additional, Stärk, K., additional, and Gottstein, B., additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Neospora caninum immunoblotting improves serodiagnosis of bovine neosporosis.
- Author
-
Staubli D, Nunez S, Sager H, Schares G, and Gottstein B
- Subjects
- Abortion, Veterinary diagnosis, Abortion, Veterinary immunology, Animals, Cattle, Cattle Diseases blood, Cattle Diseases immunology, Coccidiosis diagnosis, Coccidiosis immunology, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay methods, Female, Immunoblotting methods, Pregnancy, Sensitivity and Specificity, Antibodies, Protozoan blood, Cattle Diseases diagnosis, Coccidiosis veterinary, Immunoblotting veterinary, Neospora immunology
- Abstract
Neospora caninum ranges among the major causes of infectious abortion in cattle worldwide. The present study was designed to improve the serodiagnostic tools by complementing a conventional ELISA with a highly sensitive and species-specific N. caninum immunoblot. To evaluate this test combination, sera from several groups of cows were tested. The first group, consisting of experimentally infected calves, showed that immunoblot antibody reactivities were detectable 1 to 3 days earlier than those found in ELISA. The first immunodominant bands that appeared were a 29-kDa (NcSAG1) and a 36-kDa (NcSRS2) antigen. Other groups, based upon naturally infected cattle, were used to compare the diagnostic sensitivity of ELISA and immunoblotting. Overall, N. caninum immunoblotting exhibited a higher sensitivity (98%) than ELISA (87%). Conversely, immunoblotting also confirm in two other cases, true transient negativation in some animals. In general, banding patterns and band staining intensity correlated to the semiquantitative ELISA findings. On the other hand, the banding pattern could not be used to discriminate between sera from animals with a recent abortion and those of cows with latent N. caninum infection. We also addressed putative cross-reactions due to infection with Toxoplasma gondii. Sera from animals with a serologically proven T. gondii infection were either clearly negative by Neospora immunoblotting or they yielded a specific immunoblot antibody profile indicating a double infection with N. caninum. Sera from animals with positive findings in both Toxoplasma and Neospora ELISA thus provided dichotomic results in the immunoblot by allowing to confirm or to rule out the specificity of the antibody reaction in Neospora ELISA. Altogether, our findings demonstrate that N. caninum immunoblotting is a very sensitive and specific complementary tool to improve the serology for N. caninum infections in cattle.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Humoral immune reaction of newborn calves congenitally infected with Neospora caninum and experimentally treated with toltrazuril.
- Author
-
Haerdi C, Haessig M, Sager H, Greif G, Staubli D, and Gottstein B
- Subjects
- Abortion, Veterinary prevention & control, Animals, Animals, Newborn, Antibodies, Protozoan immunology, Antigens, Protozoan immunology, Body Weight, Cattle, Cattle Diseases immunology, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Coccidiosis drug therapy, Coccidiosis immunology, Coccidiosis transmission, Coccidiostats blood, Double-Blind Method, Female, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical prevention & control, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical veterinary, Matched-Pair Analysis, Neospora drug effects, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Parasitic, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Triazines blood, Cattle Diseases drug therapy, Coccidiosis veterinary, Coccidiostats therapeutic use, Neospora immunology, Triazines therapeutic use
- Abstract
Neospora caninum is widely recognized as one of the most important infectious organisms causing abortion and stillbirth in cattle. This parasite causes severe economical losses worldwide. Infection is mostly passed vertically from mother to calf during pregnancy. Under certain circumstances, an infection can lead to abortion, but in most cases it results in a chronically infected calf, which itself will represent the next endogenously infectious generation. So far, no reliable therapeutic or metaphylactic tool has been developed. One possibility to control the problem may consist of treating newborn calves that became vertically infected by a persistently infected mother. This may allow parasite-free offspring. The aim of the present study was to address the questions: (1) can serology be used to assess efficiency of treatment in toltrazuril-medicated animals? and (2) is a strategic prevention measure possible by means of producing N. caninum-free calves from positive cows? Calves from Neospora-seropositive cows and heifers were randomly split into two different medication groups: 36 calves were medicated with toltrazuril and 36 calves obtained a placebo. Medication (20 mg toltrazuril per kg bw) was administered three times, every second day, within the 7 days post natum. Three months after medication, there was no difference in antibody reactivity between the two groups. At later time points (4-6 months), however, significant differences were found, as explained by a strong humoral immunity after chemotherapeutical affection of parasites, while the placebo-treated animals only responded weakly to the persistent infection. In summary, we concluded that (1) serology was not an entirely appropriate tool to answer our initial question and (2) toltrazuril has the potential to eliminate N. caninum in newborn calves. As a consequence, we plan to follow up toltrazuril-medicated calves clinically and serologically over a longer period and investigate if they give birth to Neospora-free calves.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. [Search for Neospora caninum DNA in bull semen using PCR ].
- Author
-
Staubli D, Iten C, Kneubühler J, Sager H, Müller N, and Gottstein B
- Subjects
- Abortion, Veterinary parasitology, Animals, Cattle, Cattle Diseases prevention & control, Cattle Diseases transmission, Coccidiosis prevention & control, Coccidiosis transmission, Coccidiosis veterinary, Female, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical prevention & control, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical veterinary, Male, Neospora genetics, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Pregnancy, DNA, Protozoan analysis, Neospora isolation & purification, Polymerase Chain Reaction veterinary, Semen parasitology
- Abstract
Neospora caninum represents one of the most frequent abortifaciant organisms worldwide. The parasite is diaplacentally transmitted from the pregnant cow to the fetus, where it normally leads to the delivery of a healthy, however persistently infected calf. Abortion thus is a relative rare event. The transmission of bovine neosporosis occurs in more than 90% of the cases vertically due to the endogenous reactivation of a persistently infected mother. Exogenous infections are therefore responsible for less than 10% of the cases. The question arises about which infection sources may be relevant in this context. In Switzerland, the role of dogs as definitive hosts has been shown to be of low significance in that respect. Recently, discussion focused on the potential of infectious bull semen following natural or artificial insemination. Thus, a few years ago a report documented the detectability of N. caninum-DNA in the semen of naturally infected bulls by nested-PCR. As a consequence, we decided to gain own experience by investigating 5 separate semen specimens per animal, originating from 20 N. caninum-seropositive bulls used for artificial insemination in Switzerland. All probes turned out to be negative by nested PCR. Based upon our laboratory experiences, the potential bull semen-associated Neospora-problem seems not to affect the Swiss bull population, thus there is no evidence to include further respective means of control.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Precolostral serology in calves born from Neospora-seropositive mothers.
- Author
-
Staubli D, Sager H, Haerdi C, Haessig M, and Gottstein B
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Newborn blood, Antigens, Protozoan, Cattle, Coccidiosis immunology, Coccidiosis transmission, Colostrum physiology, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Female, Neospora immunology, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Parasitic, Serologic Tests, Animals, Newborn parasitology, Cattle Diseases parasitology, Coccidiosis veterinary, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical veterinary, Neospora isolation & purification
- Abstract
The present study was designed to exploratively determine (a) how many healthy calves, born from seropositive mothers, were also precolostrally seropositive; (b) how many precolostrally negative calves became postcolostrally positive; and (c) in these calves, how the IgG1/IgG2 situation developed pre- and postcolostrally. All calves were born from mothers that were determined to be seropositive in a conventional Neospora caninum-ELISA and by immunoblotting. When the diagnostic performance of the conventional ELISA was compared with that of immunoblotting and an IgG1/IgG2-ELISA in the calves, the latter two exhibited a higher sensitivity: From a total of 15 precolostral calf sera, 7 were positive in the conventional ELISA (diagnostic sensitivity 47%) compared to 15 that were positive by immunoblotting (diagnostic sensitivity 100%) and 12 that were positive by the IgG1/IgG2-ELISA (diagnostic sensitivity 80%). With regard to IgG1/IgG2 findings in the dams, IgG2 appeared as the dominant subclass in the humoral immune response of adult cattle, while in calves, IgG1 appeared as the main prenatally/precolostrally reactive antibody isotype. Provided that precolostral seropositivity reflects postnatal persistent infection with N. caninum, we then postulate that, basically, all of our study calves born form N. caninum-seropositive mothers were prenatally infected with the parasite, and may, thus, all become members of the next transmitting generation.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Neospora caninum: Serological follow-up in dairy cows during pregnancy.
- Author
-
Häsler B, Hernandez JA, Reist M, Sager H, Steiner-Moret C, Staubli D, Stärk KD, and Gottstein B
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Coccidiosis epidemiology, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay methods, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay veterinary, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Parasitic epidemiology, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Switzerland epidemiology, Abortion, Veterinary parasitology, Antibodies, Protozoan blood, Cattle Diseases epidemiology, Coccidiosis veterinary, Neospora immunology, Pregnancy Complications, Parasitic veterinary
- Abstract
We conducted a longitudinal study to follow-up the anti-Neospora caninum serologic status in 30 initially seropositive and 83 initially seronegative cows during their pregnancy. Study cows were blood-sampled every other month during pregnancy until parturition. Blood serum samples were screened for anti-N. caninum antibodies by ELISA. Cows that seroconverted were re-tested by immunoblot as a confirmation test. Among 30 seropositive cows, 28 cows remained seropositive during the whole pregnancy, whereas 2 cows transiently tested negative at least once during pregnancy. Among 83 seronegative cows, 82 cows remained seronegative and 1 cow tested positive three times during the sixth, eighth and last month of pregnancy. As only 2 out of 30 seropositive animals and 1 out of 83 animals changed their serologic status during pregnancy, the study results indicate that there is only a minor temporal instability of anti-N. caninum antibody reactivity in adult cattle.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.