12 research outputs found
Challenges for controlling bovine tuberculosis in South Africa
All effects taken together, bovine tuberculosis (bTB) has a long-term detrimental effect on
bovine herds and many wildlife species in South Africa. The disease is not only found in
domestic cattle but also in African buffaloes and has to date been diagnosed in 21 wildlife
species, including several rare and endangered species, thus having a potentially serious effect
on conservation and biodiversity. In cattle, bTB is mostly characterised by sporadic outbreaks,
but bovine herds chronically infected with the clinical disease are not uncommon. Presently,
the recognised bTB control strategy in South Africa is based on ‘test and slaughter’, using the
intradermal tuberculin test, followed by the slaughter of animals that have tested positive.
Affected herds are placed under veterinary quarantine with movement restrictions until the
outbreak is eradicated; this can take several years or last indefinitely if the outbreak cannot be
eradicated. The same measures apply to infected buffalo populations, often with no prospect
of ever being eradicated. This strategy is neither practical nor viable in the context of a
communal farming system and becomes unethical when dealing with valuable wildlife
reservoir hosts. Transmission of bTB between wildlife and cattle has been demonstrated and
emphasises the need for an effective, affordable and culturally acceptable control strategy to
curb the spread of bTB in South Africa. In countries with similar challenges, vaccination has
been used and found to be promising for treating wild and domestic reservoir species and may
hence be of value as a complementary tool for bTB control in South Africa.http://www.ojvr.org/index.php/ojvrpm2020Production Animal StudiesVeterinary Tropical Disease
Clinical presentation and pathology of suspected vector transmitted African horse sickness in South African domestic dogs from 2006 to 2017
African horse sickness (AHS) is a fatal vector transmitted viral disease of horses caused by the African horse sickness virus (AHSV). This disease is characterised by circulatory and respiratory failure, resulting from vascular endothelial injury affecting many organs. The susceptibility of dogs to AHS has been demonstrated in the past following experimental infection through consumption of infected horse meat. Thirty three clinical cases of AHS in dogs (cAHS) have been documented, without a history of ingesting infected horse meat, over a period of 12 years. The clinical cases included in this study presented with a history of acute respiratory distress syndrome or sudden death. The macroscopic and histological changes were mostly characterised by acute interstitial pneumonia, serofibrinous pleuritis and mediastinal oedema. Confirmation of cAHS was obtained by AHS specific NS4 antibody immunohistochemistry and/or AHSV specific duplex real time RT-quantitative PCR. Here, we document the clinical and postmortem diagnostic features of confirmed cAHS cases with no history of ingestion of AHS infected horse meat.http://veterinaryrecord.bmj.comhj2018Paraclinical SciencesProduction Animal Studie
Treatment rationale for dogs poisoned with aldicarb (carbamate pesticide)
The treatment rationale for dogs poisoned by aldicarb is reviewed from a pharmacological perspective. The illegal use of aldicarb to maliciously poison dogs is a major problem in some parts of the world. In South Africa, it is probably the most common canine poisoning treated by companion animal veterinarians. Aldicarb poisoning is an emergency and veterinarians need to be able to diagnose it and start with effective treatment immediately to ensure a reasonable prognosis. Successful treatment depends on the timely use of an anti-muscarinic drug (e.g. atropine). Additional supportive treatment options, including fluid therapy, diphenhydramine, benzodiazepines and the prevention of further absorption (activated charcoal) should also be considered. Possible complications after treatment are also briefly discussed.http://www.journals.co.za/ej/ejour_savet.htmlmn201
An outbreak of canine aflatoxicosis in Gauteng Province, South Africa
Sporadic outbreaks of aflatoxicosis occur in dogs when they consume contaminated dog food. During 2011, low-cost brands of pelleted dog food were contaminated with very high concentrations of aflatoxins. Approximately 100 dogs were presented to the Onderstepoort Veterinary Academic Hospital. Clinically, the dogs were depressed to collapsed and icteric, with haematemesis, melaena and haematochezia. The most common pathological findings were icterus, gastro-enterorrhagia and hepatosis. On histopathological examination, fatty hepatosis and bile duct proliferation were observed. A consistent, very characteristic finding was the presence of a blue-grey granular material within the bile ducts. A total of 124 samples of the dog food fed to the affected dogs was analysed to determine aflatoxin concentrations. Concentrations ranged from below the limit of quantification (< 5 μg/kg) to 4946 μg/kg and six samples were submitted to determine the ratio of aflatoxins in the feed. It is estimated that well over 220 dogs died in the Gauteng Province of South Africa as a result of this aflatoxin outbreak.http://www.jsava.co.zamn201
Failure of diplodiatoxin to induce diplodiosis in juvenile goats
Diplodiosis is an important neuromycotoxicosis of ruminants in South Africa when grazing on
harvested maize fields in winter. It is believed to be caused by mycotoxin(s) synthesised by
Stenocarpella (Diplodia) maydis. Although several metabolites have been isolated from S. maydis
culture material, none of these have been administered to ruminants to reproduce the disease.
The objectives of this study were to isolate diplodiatoxin and to administer it to juvenile goats.
Diplodiatoxin, considered as a major metabolite, was purified from S. maydis-infected maize
cultures (Coligny 2007 isolate). Following intravenous administration of 2 mg and 4 mg
diplodiatoxin/kg body weight for five consecutive days to two juvenile goats, no clinical signs
reminiscent of diplodiosis were observed. Based on previous experimental results and if
diplodiatoxin was the causative compound, the dosage regimen employed was seemingly
appropriate to induce diplodiosis. In addition, intraruminal administration of 2 mg/kg
diplodiatoxin to one goat for three consecutive days also did not induce clinical signs.
It appears as if diplodiatoxin alone is not the causative compound. Other metabolites and/or
mixtures of diplodiatoxin and other mycotoxins, when available in sufficient quantities,
should also be evaluated.The Maize Trust of South Africahttp://www.ojvr.orgam2021Paraclinical SciencesProduction Animal Studie
Molecular monitoring of African swine fever virus using surveys targeted at adult Ornithodoros ticks : a re-evaluation of Mkuze Game Reserve, South Africa
The Mkuze Game Reserve (MGR), in north-eastern KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa is an African swine fever virus (ASF) controlled area. In a survey conducted in 1978, ASF prevalence in warthogs and Ornithodoros ticks in MGR was determined to be 2 % and 0.06 %, respectively. These values, acknowledged as being unusually low compared to other East and southern African ASF-positive sylvatic-cycle host populations, have not been assessed since. The availability of a sensitive PCR-based virus detection method, developed specifically for the sylvatic tampan host, prompted a re-evaluation of ASF virus (ASFV) prevalence in MGR ticks. Of the 98 warthog burrows inspected for Ornithodoros presence, 59 (60.2 %) were found to contain tampans and tick sampling was significantly male-biased. Whilst gender sampling-bias is not unusual, the 27 % increase in infestation rate of warthog burrows since the 1978 survey is noteworthy as it anticipates a concomitant increase in ASFV prevalence, particularly in light of the high proportion (75 %) of adult ticks sampled. However, despite DNA integrity being confirmed by internal control amplification of the host 16S gene, PCR screening failed to detect ASFV. These results suggest that ASFV has either disappeared from MGR or if present, is localized, occurring at exceptionally low levels. Further extensive surveys are required to establish the ASFV status of sylvatic hosts in this controlled area
Treatment rationale for dogs poisoned with aldicarb (carbamate pesticide)
The treatment rationale for dogs poisoned by aldicarb is reviewed from a pharmacological perspective. The illegal use of aldicarb to maliciously poison dogs is a major problem in some parts of the world. In South Africa, it is probably the most common canine poisoning treated by companion animal veterinarians. Aldicarb poisoning is an emergency and veterinarians need to be able to diagnose it and start with effective treatment immediately to ensure a reasonable prognosis. Successful treatment depends on the timely use of an anti-muscarinic drug (e.g. atropine). Additional supportive treatment options, including fluid therapy, diphenhydramine, benzodiazepines and the prevention of further absorption (activated charcoal) should also be considered. Possible complications after treatment are also briefly discussed
Molecular monitoring of African swine fever virus using surveys targeted at adult Ornithodoros ticks : a re-evaluation of Mkuze Game Reserve, South Africa
The Mkuze Game Reserve (MGR), in north-eastern KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa is an African swine fever virus (ASF) controlled area. In a survey conducted in 1978, ASF prevalence in warthogs
and Ornithodoros ticks in MGR was determined to be 2% and 0.06% respectively. These values, acknowledged as being unusually low compared to other East and southern African ASF-positive sylvatic-cycle host populations, have not been assessed since. The availability of a sensitive PCR-based
virus detection method, developed specifically for the sylvatic tampan host, prompted a reevaluation of ASF virus (ASFV) prevalence in MGR ticks. Of the 98 warthog burrows inspected for Ornithodoros presence, 59 (60.2%) were found to contain tampans and tick sampling was significantly male-biased. Whilst gender sampling-bias is not unusual, the 27 % increase in infestation rate of warthog burrows since the 1978 survey is noteworthy as it anticipates a concomitant increase in ASFV prevalence, particularly in light of the high proportion (75%) of adult ticks sampled.
However, despite DNA integrity being confirmed by internal control amplification of the host 16S gene, PCR screening failed to detect ASFV. These results suggest that ASFV has either disappeared from MGR or if present, is localized, occurring at exceptionally low levels. Further extensive surveys are required to establish the ASFV status of sylvatic hosts in this controlled area.Financial support for the Mkuze tick
survey was provided through an RDP and Thuthuka grant awarded to ADSB by the University of Pretoria and the National Research Foundation of South Africa
A host species-informative internal control for molecular assessment of African swine fever virus infection rates in the African sylvatic cycle Ornithodoros vector
African swine fever virus (ASFV) infection in adult Ornithodoros porcinus
(Murry 1877, sensu Walton 1979) ticks collected from warthog burrows in southern
and East Africa was assessed using a duplex genomic amplification approach that
is informative with respect to the invertebrate host species and infecting sylvatic cycle virus. DNA extracted from individual ticks was used as template for the
simultaneous amplification of a C-terminal 478-bp ASFV p72 gene region and a
∼313-bp fragment of the tick mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene, under optimized reaction
conditions. Within-warthog burrow infection rates ranged from 0% to 43% using this
approach, and phylogenetic analysis of 16S gene sequences revealed the presence
of three geographically discrete O. porcinus lineages, but no support for subspecies
recognition. False negatives are precluded by the inclusion of host species-informative
primers that ensure the DNA integrity of cytoplasmically located genome extracts.
In addition, infection rate estimates are further improved as false positives arising
from carry-over contamination when performing a two-step nested polymerase chain
reaction are negated by the one-step approach. Phylogenetic comparison of fulllength virus gene sequences with the partial C-terminal p72 gene target confirmed the
epidemiological utility of the latter in a sylvatic setting. The method is therefore of
particular value in studies assessing the prevalence and diversity of ASFV in relation
to the African sylvatic tick vector and holds potential for investigating the role of
alternative tick species in virus maintenance and transmission.This research was supported by a Research and Development Programme (RDP) and Thuthuka grant awarded to ADSB by the University of Pretoria and the National Research Foundation of South Africa, respectively
Recommended from our members
Solution calorimetry as a tool for investigating drug interaction with intestinal fluid
Solution calorimetry offers a reproducible technique for measuring the enthalpy of solution (ΔsolH) of a solute dissolving into a solvent. The ΔsolH of two solutes, propranolol HCl and mannitol were determined in simulated intestinal fluid (SIF) solutions designed to model the fed and fasted states within the gut, and in Hanks’ balanced salt solution (HBSS) of varying pH. The bile salt and lipid within the SIF solutions formed mixed micelles. Both solutes exhibited endothermic reactions in all solvents. The ΔsolH for propranolol HCl in the SIF solutions differed from those in the HBSS and was lower in the fed state than the fasted state SIF solution, revealing an interaction between propranolol and the micellar phase in both SIF solutions. In contrast, for mannitol the ΔsolH was constant in all solutions indicating minimal interaction between mannitol and the micellar phases of the SIF solutions. In this study, solution calorimetry proved to be a simple method for measuring the enthalpy associated with the dissolution of model drugs in complex biological media such as SIF solutions. In addition, the derived power–time curves allowed the time taken for the powdered solutes to form solutions to be estimated