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Preventive Veterinary Medicine
Elsevier
Preventive Veterinary Medicine

Elsevier

0167-5877

Preventive Veterinary Medicine/Journal Preventive Veterinary MedicineSCIISTP
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    The knowns and unknowns of the efficacy of neem oil (Azadirachta indica) used as a preventative measure against Leishmania sand fly vectors (Phlebotomus genus)

    Zatelli, AndreaFondati, AlessandraMaroli, MicheleCanine Leishmaniosis Working Grp...
    5页
    查看更多>>摘要:Since domestic dogs are the main reservoir hosts of Leishmania infantum throughout the world, they are the main focus in terms of controlling zoonotic visceral leishmaniosis. To protect dogs from leishmaniosis, chemical repellents of durable efficacy are available in the form of collars, spot-on and sprays. However, the negative effects of chemical pesticides on the environment are well established as they affect animals and plants. This phenomenon has created the need for safer and more environmentally friendly substitutes. Plant extract-based insecticides and/or repellents have therefore been increasingly used by pet owners and veterinarians. Several botanical products have been tested as insecticides and/or repellents against a variety of bloodsucking arthropods that transmit human diseases. Among the products tested against Leishmania vectors, neem oil containing azadirachtin is the most studied. This study reviews the scientific literature concerning the efficacy of neem oil (azadirachtin-based products) against phlebotomine sand fly bites. A questionnaire was also administered to assess Italian veterinarians' attitudes to the use of neem oil. The survey was anonymous and consisted of three closed-ended questions. According to the data reported in the literature, the efficacy of neem oil in reducing the risk of sand fly bites has been tested against Phlebotomus papatasi, Phlebotomus perniciosus, Phlebotomus argentipes, Phlebotomus orientalis and Phlebotomus bergeroti. The efficacy of the products tested was expressed in percentages, ranging from 74.9% to 100%. The protection time was only available for six out of eight studies, ranging from "only during the first hour" (minimum protection time) to "all night" (expected maximum protection time). As regards the attitude to recommending the use of neem oil, 208 veterinarians participated in the online survey. Of the 126 veterinarians who recommended natural products, 119 (94.44%) reported that they recommended the use of neem oil-based products. Considering the limited data on the duration of protection and the dose of the active ingredient, more studies are required on the efficacy of neem oil-based products in reducing the risk of contracting canine leishmaniosis. These studies should also refer specifically to the concentration of the active ingredient as well as the interval of administration. Until such results are available, the use of azadirachtin-based products as the only topical products for the prevention of leishmaniosis in dogs is not recommended.

    Epidemiology of paratuberculosis in sheep and goats in southern Spain

    Fernandez-Molera, VicenteJimenez-Ruiz, SaulIsla, JulioCano-Terriza, David...
    6页
    查看更多>>摘要:Paratuberculosis is a worldwide, chronic infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium avium subsp. para-tuberculosis (MAP) that mainly affects ruminant species. This disease has a significant economic impact on small ruminant production due to the costs of implementing control measures and production losses. A cross-sectional study was carried out to determine the seroprevalence, spatial distribution and risk factors associated with MAP exposure in sheep and goats in Andalusia (southern Spain). Serum samples from 4134 small ruminants (2266 sheep and 1868 goats) in 153 flocks were tested by an in-house ELISA for antibodies against MAP using para-tuberculosis protoplasmic antigen 3 (PPA3) as coating antigen. Antibodies against MAP were detected in 8.1% (183/2266; 95% CI: 7.0-9.2%) of sheep and 20.0% (374/1868; 95% CI: 18.2-21.8%) of goats. The true indi-vidual seroprevalence was 8.4% (95% CI: 6.9-10.1%) in sheep and 25.2% (95% CI: 22.7-27.8%) in goats. Seropositivity was detected in 66.3% (55/83; 95% CI: 56.1-76.4%) of sheep herds and 90.0% (63/70; 95% CI: 83.0-97.0%) of goat herds. Spatial analysis identified three statistically significant clusters (p < 0.05) associated with areas with higher seroprevalence of MAP. The main risk factors potentially associated with MAP exposure were: species (goat) and absence of perimeter livestock fencing. The results of this study show that MAP is widespread in small ruminant populations in southern Spain and suggest that goats may play a more important role than sheep in the transmission and maintenance of MAP. Because of animal health concerns and the eco-nomic consequences of paratuberculosis, appropriate surveillance and control programs are required to reduce the risk of MAP infections in small ruminant flocks in this country.

    WHO critical priority van-type vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus in dogs and cats

    Sacramento, Andrey G.Andrade, Ana Cecilia D.Teotonio, Bianca N.Santos, Luis M. de Oliveira...
    4页

    Estimating population sensitivity and confidence of freedom from highly pathogenic avian influenza in the Victorian poultry industry using passive surveillance

    Sergeant, Evan S. G.Dries, Leanna R.Moore, Karen M.Salmon, Sally E....
    10页
    查看更多>>摘要:Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) is a serious disease affecting multiple organ systems and resulting in high levels of mortality in domestic poultry and may also be a serious zoonotic condition. In July-August 2020, HPAI was confirmed on 3 egg-laying chicken farms in Victoria, Australia, while a further two turkey farms and one emu farm were diagnosed with low pathogenicity viruses. All six farms were depopulated and decontaminated by 26 November 2020 and Australia declared regained freedom from HPAI on 26 February 2021. As part of the follow-up surveillance in support of claiming HPAI freedom, a scenario-tree model was developed to estimate the population sensitivity of passive surveillance for the detection of HPAI in the Victorian commercial poultry industry, and to also estimate the confidence of freedom from HPAI provided by passive surveillance, predicted over a 2-year period. Risk factors included in the model were industry sector (breeder, broiler, layer and other), flock size: small commercial (50 <= 5000 birds) or large commercial (> 5000 birds) and housing type (cage, barn or free-range). A detection cascade was also modelled, with probabilities allocated, to estimate the flock sensitivity for flocks in each risk stratum. System sensitivity and confidence of freedom were then estimated across all flocks in the industry. Design prevalence was set at 1, 2, 5 or 10 infected flocks and prior confidence of freedom at 0.5. Other model inputs were entered as probability distributions and the model was simulated for 10,000 iterations. Outputs were expressed as median and 95% probability intervals (PI), with the time period for analysis set at 1 month. Median system sensitivity was 0.58 (95% PI: 0.47-0.69) per time period for a single infected flock, increasing to 0.81, 0.985 and 0.9998 for 2, 5 and 10 infected flocks respectively. Median confidence of freedom was > 0.7 (95% PI: 0.65-0.76) after one time period and exceeded 0.95 and 0.99 after 4 and 7 months, respectively for one infected flock and 2 and 3 months respectively for 2 infected flocks. These results support the conclusion that passive surveillance is a highly effective tool for the detection of HPAI in commercial poultry and add further weight to evidence that HPAI has been successfully eradicated from the Victorian poultry industry and that the industry has regained HPAI free status.

    Parameterization of the durations of phases of foot-and-mouth disease in pigs

    Moreno-Torres, Karla, IDelgado, Amy H.Branan, Matthew A.Yadav, Shankar...
    13页
    查看更多>>摘要:The global interconnectedness of the pig-production industry and the diversity of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) viruses (FMDVs) currently circulating, makes modeling disease spread and control in FMD-free areas challenging. However, advances in experimental design and transmission studies create opportunities to strengthen our understanding and ability to model FMD transmission. In the current study, we estimated the duration of defined phases of FMDV infection in pigs by using data from a large collection of controlled in vivo experiments. Because the detection of low-levels of viral RNA does not correspond to infectiousness, an experimentally defined minimum threshold of FMDV RNA shedding in oropharyngeal fluids was used to estimate the onset of infectiousness in experiments in which transmission was not evaluated. Animal-level data were used in Accelerated Failure Time models to assess the effect of experimental design factors in the duration of defined phases of FMDV infection: latent, incubation, pre-clinical infectious, clinical infectious, and total infectious periods. The estimated means of the phases were latent: 25 h (95%CI 21, 29), incubation: 70 h (95%CI 64, 76), pre-clinical infectious: 36 h (95%CI 32, 41), clinical infectious: 265 h (95%CI 258, 272) and total infectious: 282 h (95% CI 273, 290). Virus strains and exposure methods had no significant influence on the duration of latency, incubation, or clinical infectious phases. By contrast, the estimated means of the duration of the pre-clinical infectious and total infectious phases were significantly influenced by virus strains, and the duration of the preclinical infectious phase was significantly influenced by exposure methods. This study provides disease parameters based on an estimated threshold of the onset of infectiousness and a probability distribution representing the end of infectiousness. Disease parameters that incorporate experimentally-based quantitative proxies to define phases of FMDV infection may improve planning and preparedness for FMD.

    Is serology a realistic approach for monitoring red deer tuberculosis in the field?

    Ferreras-Colino, ElisaMoreno, InmaculadaCruz Arnal, MariaFernandez de Luco, Daniel...
    9页
    查看更多>>摘要:Tuberculosis (TB) is a zoonotic mycobacterial infection with great importance in human health, animal production, and wildlife conservation. Although an ambitious eradication programme in cattle has been implemented for decades, TB-free status has not yet been achieved in most of Spain, where animal TB persists in a multi-host system of domestic and wild hosts, including the red deer (Cervus elaphus). However, information on long time series and trends of TB prevalence in wildlife is scarce. The diagnosis of TB in wild red deer is often based on gross pathology and bacteriological culture confirmation, although recently serological assays have been developed to detect anti- Mycobacterium tuberculosis Complex (MTC) antibodies. Particularly, protein complex P22 has demonstrated to yield good specificity and sensitivity in the serological diagnosis of MTC for red deer, as well as cattle, goats, sheep, pigs, wild boar, and European badger. Thus, the objective of the present study was to compare the performance of the P22-ELISA with TB-compatible lesion detection, as well as to assess the potential application of each technique for determining spatiotemporal trends and risk factors of MTC infection in wild red deer from low and high TB prevalence areas of Spain over the last two decades. We tested 5095 sera from 13 wild populations by indirect ELISA using P22 as antigen. Mean seroprevalence (13.22%, CI95: 12.32-14.18) was compared with the prevalence of macroscopic TB-compatible lesions (6.94%, CI95: 6.18-7.79). The results evidenced a poor agreement between both techniques (K < 0.3), although generalized TB-lesions and anti-P22 antibodies showed a positive association (chi 2 = 9.054, P = 0.004). Consequently, TB-lesion based prevalence and seroprevalence cannot be considered as equivalent for TB surveillance in red deer. Regarding the spatiotemporal trend of TB in red deer in Spain, we observed a North-South gradient of TB occurrence [North: 1.23% (CI95: 0.77-1.97) of TB-lesions and 12.55% (CI95: 10.91-14.41) of P22-ELISA; Centre: 7.10% (CI95: 6.04-8.33) and 8.74% (CI95: 7.57-10.08); South: 21.04% (CI95:17.81-24.69) and 23.09% (CI95: 19.73-26.84), respectively]. Overall, there was a stability over time, with higher prevalence in adults belonging to densely populated sites. We conclude that the P22-ELISA alone is not sufficiently reliable for TB surveillance in red deer at large spatiotemporal scales. Instead, we recommend combining gross pathology and P22-ELISA.

    Outbreak investigation and identification of risk factors associated with the occurrence of foot and mouth disease in Punjab, Pakistan

    Conraths, Franz JosefAli, ImtiazRehman, AbdulMushtaq, Muhammad Hassan...
    9页
    查看更多>>摘要:Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is a highly contagious viral disease of domesticated and wild ruminants and pigs that causes enormous economic losses through morbidity, mortality, and trade restrictions. Although the disease is endemic in Pakistan, seasonal outbreaks occur every year throughout the country. This study aimed to investigate FMD outbreaks and to identify the risk factors associated with FMD outbreaks between January and April 2019 in the Punjab province. We performed outbreak investigations (n = 64) for FMD in nine districts of the Punjab province through Divisional Disease Diagnostic Laboratories, Livestock and Dairy Development Department Punjab. Subsequently, we conducted a case-control study including 128 livestock farms (case to control ratio = 1). The data on various plausibly associated factors were collected using a structured questionnaire from each farm. The FMD outbreaks started during the month of January, culminated in February (n = 36, 56.25%) and stopped during the month of April 2019. The most common serotype was O (45.83%), followed by Asia1 (29.17%) and A (13.89%); however, some case farms had mixed infection with serotypes A and O (9.72%) and serotypes O and Asia1 (1.39%). Multivariable analysis revealed that the history of introducing a new animal with unknown FMD vaccination status in the herd (OR =11.51, 95% CI = 3.28 - 40.47), not practicing regular vaccination against FMD (OR = 20.81, 95% CI = 4.59 - 94.35), history of the visit of an animal broker (OR = 9.06, 95% CI = 2.31 - 35.61), distance of the farm to a nearby livestock farm (OR = 6.13, 95% CI = 1.39 - 27.01) and large herd size (OR = 20.79, 95% CI = 2.45 - 176.27) were significantly associated with the occurrence of FMD outbreaks in Punjab province during 2019. In conclusion, improving biosecurity measures, avoiding the introduction of animals without FMD vaccination history and regular vaccination against FMD can significantly reduce the occurrence of the disease on livestock farms in Pakistan.

    SVEPM 2021-Research sharing and networking in times of pandemic: The online Annual Conference of the Society for Veterinary Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine

    Dorea, Fernanda C.Vergne, Timotheevan Schaik, GerdienBarrett, Damien...
    3页

    Productivity loss and cost of bovine tuberculosis for the dairy livestock sector in Ethiopia

    Conlan, AndrewGemechu, GizachewWood, JamesETHICOBOTS Consortium...
    7页
    查看更多>>摘要:Bovine tuberculosis (BTB) is endemic in Ethiopia. Although upgraded dairy cattle account for only 1% of the total cattle population, they are the backbone of the marketed milk production in the country. Supported by research data outputs from three years, we report in this paper an estimate of the productivity loss and cost of BTB to the Ethiopian dairy sector in two dairy settings, the urban production system in Central Ethiopia (model 1) and the national upgraded dairy production (model 2). Primary data sources were used (e.g. market survey; three-year longitudinal productivity survey; abattoir survey) as well as secondary data sources. A matrix population model, composed of a population vector representing the herd composition that is repeatedly multiplied with a projection matrix, was developed to simulate the livestock dairy population. The initial herd structure was simulated over 30 years to obtain an equilibrium herd-structure representing an Eigenvector of the projection matrix. We performed an incremental cost of disease analysis by comparing livestock production with and without BTB during a period of 10 years. We assumed a BTB prevalence of 40%. In year ten, the Net present value (NPV) of livestock production in terms of milk, meat and hides was estimated at 154.5 million USD for model 1 and 1.7 billion USD for model 2. Loss of NPV over 10 years was estimated at 12 million USD for model 1 and 131.7 million USD for model 2, representing roughly 7.3% loss in NPV or 219 USD per animal. This is a benchmark against which a national TB control program could be developed in the future to calculate its benefit/cost ratio.

    Antimicrobial use on Australian dairy cattle farms-A survey of veterinarians

    Tree, MicheleMcDougall, ScottBeggs, David S.Robertson, Ian D....
    11页
    查看更多>>摘要:Aims: The aims of this study were to determine antimicrobial prescription patterns and the factors affecting antimicrobial selection amongst Australian dairy veterinarians.Methods: A structured questionnaire was administered to Australian dairy cattle veterinarians using the Qualtrics online survey platform. Questions focused on their (1) demographics; (2) opinions surrounding antimicrobial use, resistance, and stewardship; (3) decision-making drivers of both prescription and selection of commonly prescribed antimicrobials; (4) awareness on the guidelines for antimicrobial usage and sources of information concerning antimicrobials. Key results: A total of 135 responses (14.1% response rate) from all eight dairying regions in Australia were received. The attitudes, perceptions, and concerns of dairy veterinarians towards antimicrobials indicated a high agreement regarding label indications (96%), consequences of off-label prescription (95%), and the presence of an antimicrobial resistance (AMR) risk (73%), when prescribing antibiotics. A four-dimensional categorical principal components analysis (CATPCA) model indicated most of the variation in opinion was due to AMR risk, trade-offs, prescription concerns and active substance concerns. The first active substance most dairy veterinarians chose for a scenario involving mastitis and dry cow therapy (DCT) treatment was cloxacillin. Decision-making drivers for antimicrobial choice when providing advice regarding the supply of antimicrobials for mastitis and DCT treatment were predominately clinical factors; however, diagnostics were rarely used in determining antimicrobial choice due to cost of implementation, diagnostic accuracy (sensi-tivity, specificity), and benefit issues. Non-clinical decision-making drivers included the perception of practicality for Australian Veterinary Association (AVA) prescription guidelines, opinions surrounding AMR risk and prescription concerns, consideration of Expert Advisory Group on Antimicrobial Resistance (EAGAR) scores, number of years worked with dairy farms, and the number of dairy farms they regularly consult for. When available at the practice, prescription policies were considered to impact on animal welfare outcomes and on the probability of AMR emergence. The major information sources influencing decision making on antimicrobial prescription for the Australian dairy veterinarians were clinical experience (93%) and product labels (81%).Conclusions: Australian dairy veterinarians are generally aware of the risk of resistance to antimicrobials and the need for stewardship, with clinical factors having the most impact on antimicrobial prescription. However, non-clinical factors incorporating awareness of guidelines and their attitudes on antimicrobial resistance risk and prescription concerns impact on the choice and prescription of antimicrobials. Implications: The development of prescription policy and guidelines, alongside effective communicative extension programs to increase veterinarian uptake, provides an avenue to mitigate AMR risk in Australian dairy cattle.