62 research outputs found

    Staphylococcus aureus effect of different factors on mammary gland infection with staphylococcus aureus bacteria

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    The objective of our investigation was to determine how certain factors (the environment, treatment, prevention, animal) affect udder infection with Staphylococcus aureurs (S. aureus) bacteria. A questionnaire investigated the effect of different factors on the frequency of infection with S. aureus bacteria. We established that prevention, treatment on the basis of results of bacteriological examinations and antibiograms, and the elimination of the negative influence of the environment, form a basis for reducing the frequency of udder infections. We verified the questionannire results with the variant analysis method and established that the effect of the environment significantly digresses from the other factors (prevention treatment and diagnosis, animal). Our results show that the breeder, with good prevention and good treatment of mastitis, often disregards the effects of the barn and the environment in which the cows are maintained. Poor barn conditions have a negative effect on cow resistance and at the same time enable the existence and multiplication of pathogenic species of bacteria. In addition to the maintenance conditions, one must not forget prevention and therapy of mammary gland inflammation, either. On the grounds of our previous investigations (Pengov et al., 2000), we recommend for the therapy of mammary gland inflammation the use of a combination of amoxicillin and clavulonic acid, and as prevention of mammary gland inflammation the use of an udder ointment

    Etude de la croissance de la Saccharomyces cerevisiae. ContrÎle et observation d'un bioprocédé semi-continu

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    Le travail présenté dans ce rapport a pour objet l'amélioration de la productivité d'un procédé de fabrication de la levure Saccharomyces cerevisiae et en particulier la synthÚse d'observateurs en vue de leur utilisation dans une loi de commande. La premiÚre partie de notre étude concerne les propriétés du modÚle. On s'intéresse également à la synthÚse d'un observateur Grand Gain et à un observateur de type Kalman étendu. Des simulations montrent le comportement dynamique des observateurs proposés

    Evaluation of the Charm maximum residue limit beta-lactam and tetracycline test for the detection of antibiotics in ewe and goat milk

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    The Charm maximum residue limit P-lactam and tetracycline test (Charm MRL BLTET; Charm Sciences Inc., Lawrence, MA) is an immunoreceptor assay utilizing Rapid. One-Step Assay lateral flow technology that detects P-lactam or tetracycline drugs in raw commingled cow milk at or below European Union maximum residue levels (EU-MRL). The Charm MRL BLTET test procedure was recently modified (dilution in buffer and longer incubation) by the manufacturers to be used with raw ewe and goat milk. To assess the Charm MRL BLTET test for the detection of beta-lactams and tetracyclines in milk of small ruminants, an evaluation study was performed at Instituto de Ciencia y Tecnologia Animal of Universitat Politecnica de Valencia (Spain). The test specificity and detection capability (CC beta) were studied following Commission Decision 2002/657/EC. Specificity results obtained in this study were optimal for individual milk free of antimicrobials from ewes (99.2% for beta-lactams and 100% for tetracyclines) and goats (97.9% for beta-lactams and 100% for tetracyclines) along the entire lactation period regardless of whether the results were visually or instrumentally interpreted. Moreover, no positive results were obtained when a relatively high concentration of different substances belonging to antimicrobial families other than beta-lactams and tetracyclines were present in ewe and goat milk. For both types of milk, the CC beta calculated was lower or equal to EU-MRL for amoxicillin (4 mu g/kg), ampicillin (4 mu g/kg), benzylpenicillin (30 mu g/kg). The CC beta for tetracyclines was also lower than EU-MRL for chlortetracycline (ewe milk: <= 50 mu g/kg; goat milk: 75 mu g/kg), oxytetracycline (<= 50 mu g/kg), and tetracycline (<= 50 mu g/kg). Regarding the 4-epimers of these tetracyclines only 4-epioxytetracycline was detected by the Charm MRL BLTET test below EU-MRL (ewe milk: 75 mu g/kg; goat milk: <= 50 mu g/kg). Acidiol had no effect on the performance of the test. The Charm MRL BLTET test could be used routinely with adapted test procedure for the fast screening of ewe and goat milk.This work forms part of the Project AGL2009-11524 financed by the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion (Madrid, Spain). The authors are grateful to Fatro S.p.A. (Bologna, Italy) and ACS Dobfar S.p.A. (Milan, Italy) for kindly providing cefacetrile and desacetylcefapirin, respectively. Moreover, the authors thank Charm Sciences, Inc. (Lawrence, MA) and especially Wilbert Kokke from Charm Sciences Inc. and Raul Gomez from Grupo Taper, S.A. (Madrid, Spain) for their support.BeltrĂĄn MartĂ­nez, MC.; Romero Rueda, T.; Althaus, RL.; Molina Pons, MP. (2013). Evaluation of the Charm maximum residue limit beta-lactam and tetracycline test for the detection of antibiotics in ewe and goat milk. Journal of Dairy Science. 96(5):2737-2745. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2012-6044S2737274596

    Eliminacija kloramfenikola u kalifornijskoj pastrvi

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    Chloramphenicol muscle residue levels in rainbow trout were determined after oral administration of 84 ÎŒg kg−1d−1 of chloramphenicol for four days. Samples were taken one day before treatment and for 43 days after the treatment was over. Chloramphenicol was analysed using an in-house enzyme linked immunoassay (ELISA) validated against the criteria of the Commission Decision 2002/657/EC. Validation parameters confi rmed that the method was appropriate for the detection of chloramphenicol at levels below the minimum required performance limit (MRPL) of 0.3 ÎŒg kg−1. The highest chloramphenicol levels were observed on the fi rst day after the treatment had ended (144.3 ÎŒg kg−1). Elimination was signifi cant over the fi rst seven days; signifi cant differences were detected between days 1 and 3 (p<0.001), 3 and 5 (p<0.001), and 5 and 7 (p<0.05). Chloramphenicol levels dropped below MRPL to 0.17 ÎŒg kg−1 on day 9 after the end of treatment. From day 11 to 43, chloramphenicol residues were detectable in a range from 0.091 ÎŒg kg−1 (highest) to 0.011 ÎŒg kg−1 (lowest). Our results indicate that trout muscle tissue could be compliant with health requirements for consumption 10 days after withdrawal from chloramphenicol treatment.Određivani su ostaci kloramfenikola u miĆĄićnom tkivu kalifornijske pastrve nakon oralne primjene u dozi od 84 ÎŒg kg−1d−1 tijekom 4 dana. Uzorkovanje je provedeno dan prije tretmana te tijekom 43 dana nakon tretmana. Maseni udjeli kloramfenikola određivani su primjenom in-house imunoenzimske metode (ELISA) validirane prema kriterijima Odluke Komisije 2002/657/EC. Dobiveni validacijski parametri pokazuju da je metoda prikladna za određivanje kloramfenikola na nivou manjem od vrijednosti granice najmanje zahtijevane učinkovitosti izvedbe metode (MRPL) od 0,3 ÎŒg kg−1. NajviĆĄi maseni udjeli kloramfenikola utvrđeni su prvog dana nakon zavrĆĄetka tretmana (144,3 ÎŒg kg−1). Statistički značajna eliminacija utvrđena je tijekom sedam dana te je značajno smanjenje određeno između prvog i trećeg (p<0,001), trećeg i petog (p<0,001) te petog i sedmog dana nakon tretmana (p<0,05). Razina kloramfenikola ispod MRPL vrijednosti utvrđena je devetog dana (0,17 ÎŒg kg−1) nakon tretmana. U vremenu od 11. do 43. dana nakon tretmana određeni su ostaci kloramfenikola od maksimalno 0,091 ÎŒg kg−1 do minimalno 0,011 ÎŒg kg−1. Prikazani rezultati pokazuju da se 10 dana nakon zavrĆĄetka tretmana tkivo pastrve moĆŸe smatrati prikladnim za konzumaciju bez potencijalne ĆĄtete za zdravlje

    Antibiotic resistance in the environment, with particular reference to MRSA

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    The introduction of ÎČ-lactam antibiotics (penicillins and cephalosporins) in the 1940s and 1950s probably represents the most dramatic event in the battle against infection in human medicine. Even before widespread global use of penicillin, resistance was already recorded. E. coli producing a penicillinase was reported in Nature in 1940 (Abraham, 1940) and soon after a similar penicillinase was discovered in Staphylococcus aureus (Kirby, 1944). The appearance of these genes, so quickly after the discovery and before the widespread introduction of penicillin, clearly shows that the resistance genes pre-dated clinical use of the antibiotic itself

    Clinical mastitis in ewes; bacteriology, epidemiology and clinical features

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Clinical mastitis is an important disease in sheep. The objective of this work was to identify causal bacteria and study certain epidemiological and clinical features of clinical mastitis in ewes kept for meat and wool production.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The study included 509 ewes with clinical mastitis from 353 flocks located in 14 of the 19 counties in Norway. Clinical examination and collection of udder secretions were carried out by veterinarians. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) was performed on 92 <it>Staphylococcus aureus </it>isolates from 64 ewes.</p> <p>Results and conclusion</p> <p><it>S. aureus </it>was recovered from 65.3% of 547 clinically affected mammary glands, coagulase-negative staphylococci from 2.9%, enterobacteria, mainly <it>Escherichia coli</it>, from 7.3%, <it>Streptococcus </it>spp. from 4.6%, <it>Mannheimia haemolytica </it>from 1.8% and various other bacteria from 4.9%, while no bacteria were cultured from 13.2% of the samples. Forty percent of the ewes with unilateral clinical <it>S. aureus </it>mastitis also had a subclinical <it>S. aureus </it>infection in the other mammary gland. Twenty-four of 28 (86%) pairs of <it>S. aureus </it>isolates obtained from clinically and subclinically affected mammary glands of the same ewe were indistinguishable by PFGE. The number of identical pairs was significantly greater than expected, based on the distribution of different <it>S. aureus </it>types within the flocks. One-third of the cases occurred during the first week after lambing, while a second peak was observed in the third week of lactation. Gangrene was present in 8.8% of the clinically affected glands; <it>S. aureus </it>was recovered from 72.9%, <it>Clostridium perfringens </it>from 6.3% and <it>E. coli </it>from 6.3% of the secretions from such glands. This study shows that <it>S. aureus </it>predominates as a cause of clinical ovine mastitis in Norway, also in very severe cases. Results also indicate that <it>S. aureus </it>is frequently spread between udder halves of infected ewes.</p

    Prions in Milk from Ewes Incubating Natural Scrapie

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    Since prion infectivity had never been reported in milk, dairy products originating from transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE)-affected ruminant flocks currently enter unrestricted into the animal and human food chain. However, a recently published study brought the first evidence of the presence of prions in mammary secretions from scrapie-affected ewes. Here we report the detection of consistent levels of infectivity in colostrum and milk from sheep incubating natural scrapie, several months prior to clinical onset. Additionally, abnormal PrP was detected, by immunohistochemistry and PET blot, in lacteal ducts and mammary acini. This PrPSc accumulation was detected only in ewes harbouring mammary ectopic lymphoid follicles that developed consequent to Maedi lentivirus infection. However, bioassay revealed that prion infectivity was present in milk and colostrum, not only from ewes with such lympho-proliferative chronic mastitis, but also from those displaying lesion-free mammary glands. In milk and colostrum, infectivity could be recovered in the cellular, cream, and casein-whey fractions. In our samples, using a Tg 338 mouse model, the highest per ml infectious titre measured was found to be equivalent to that contained in 6 ”g of a posterior brain stem from a terminally scrapie-affected ewe. These findings indicate that both colostrum and milk from small ruminants incubating TSE could contribute to the animal TSE transmission process, either directly or through the presence of milk-derived material in animal feedstuffs. It also raises some concern with regard to the risk to humans of TSE exposure associated with milk products from ovine and other TSE-susceptible dairy species

    Genetic selection for reduced somatic cell counts in sheep milk: A review

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    Mastitis is an in\ufb02ammation of the udder, mainly caused by bacteria, and leads to economic loss, due to discarded milk, reduced milk production, reduced milk quality and increased health costs in both dairy sheep and cattle. Selecting for increased genetic resistance to mastitis can be done directly or indirectly, with the indirect selection corresponding to a prediction of the bacteriological status of the udder based on traits related to the infection. The most frequently used indirect method is currently milk somatic cell count (SCC) or somatic cell score (SCS). This review reports the state of the art relating to the genetic basis of mastitis resistance in sheep and explores the opportunities to use SCC as selection criterion in a breeding programme to improve resistance to mastitis in sheep, discussing the actual situation and prospects for improvement. It has been stressed, in particular, that although it is unlikely that selection for mastitis resistance by the farmers on their own will be successful, there is good prospect for genetic improvement if reliable pedigree and performance recording is implemented across \ufb02ocks, combined with breeding value estimation. To achieve this, a strong and well-structured organization to implement and support the programme is essential

    Probabilistic Decision Trees using SVM for Multi-class Classification

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    In the automotive repairing backdrop, retrieving from previously solved incident the database features that could support and speed up the diagnostic is of great usefulness. This decision helping process should give a fixed number of the more relevant diagnostic classified in a likelihood sense. It is a probabilistic multi-class classification problem. This paper describes an original classification technique, the Probabilistic Decision Tree (PDT) producing a posteriori probabilities in a multi-class context. It is based on a Binary Decision Tree (BDT) with Probabilistic Support Vector Machine classifier (PSVM). At each node of the tree, a bi-class SVM along with a sigmoid function are trained to give a probabilistic classification output. For each branch, the outputs of all the nodes composing the branch are combined to lead to a complete evaluation of the probability when reaching the final leaf (representing the class associated to the branch). To illustrate the effectiveness of PDTs, they are tested on benchmark datasets and results are compared with other existing approaches.This research has been sponsored by PSA
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