20 research outputs found

    Staphylococcus spp. associated with subclinical bovine mastitis in central and northeast provinces of Thailand

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    Background Staphylococcus spp. are major cause of bovine mastitis (BM) worldwide leading to economic damage to dairy farms and public health threat. Recently, a newly emerged Staphylococcus argenteus has been found as a human and animal pathogen. Molecular characteristics, virulence and antibiotic resistant phenotypes of bacteria causing BM in Thailand are rare. This study aimed to investigated Staphylococcus spp. associated with subclinical bovine mastitis (SCM) in Thailand. Methods Milk samples were collected from 224 cows of 52 dairy herds in four central and northeast provinces. Total somatic cell counts (SCC) and California mastitis test (CMT) were used to identify SCM cows. Milk samples were cultured for Staphylococcus spp. Coagulase-positive isolates were subjected to pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and multilocus sequence typing (MLST). Organisms suspected as S. argenteus were verified by detecting nonribosomal peptide synthetase gene. All isolates were checked for antibiograms and the presence of various virulence genes. Results From the 224 milk samples of 224 cows, 132 (59%) were positive for SCM by SCC and CMT and 229 staphylococcal isolates were recovered. They were 32 coagulase-positive (24 S. aureus and eight S. argenteus) and 197 coagulase-negative. PFGE of the S. aureus and S. argenteus revealed 11 clusters and a non-typeable pattern. MLST of representatives of the 11 PFGE clusters, three PFGE non-typeable S. aureus isolates from different locations and S. argenteus showed 12 sequence types. The eight S. argenteus isolates belonged to ST1223 (three isolates), ST2250 (two isolates), and ST2793 (two isolates). The antimicrobial tests identified 11 (46%) methicillin-resistant S. aureus and 25 (13%) methicillin-resistant coagulase-negative isolates, while seven S. argenteus were methicillin-susceptible and one isolate was methicillin-resistant. All of the 229 isolates were multiply resistant to other antibiotics. The most prevalent virulence genes of the 24 S. aureus isolates were clfA, coa and spa (X and IgG-binding region) (100%), hla (96%), pvl (96%) and sec (79%). Six S. argenteus isolates carried one enterotoxin gene each and other virulence genes including coa, clfA, hla/hlb, spa, tsst and pvl, indicating their pathogenic potential. Conclusion and perspective This is the first report on the S. argenteus from cow milk samples with SCM. Data on the molecular characteristics, virulence genes and antibiograms of the Staphylococcus spp. obtained from the present study showed a wide spread and increasing trend of methicillin-resistance and multiple resistance to other antibiotics. This suggests that the “One Health” practice should be nurtured, not only at the dairy farm level, but also at the national or even the international levels through cooperation of different sectors (dairy farmers, veterinarians, medical and public health personnel and scientists) in order to effectively combat and control the spread of these pathogens

    A study of grade inflation in the Industrial Education Department at Iowa State University

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    This study was undertaken to investigate whether the mean overall grade point average of students in the Industrial Education Department in the years 1964, 1969, 1974 and 1979 has increased significantly compared to the mean overall grade point average of students in other departments in the same years at Iowa State University. The study was also designed to determine whether the mean grade point average in the subject areas and course levels has increased significantly in the same year periods for the same groups of students;This study was made up of two sections. The first section was to explore aspects of grade inflation in the Industrial Education Department in comparison to the other departments. One hundred and ninety-two (192) academic records of students who majored in the Industrial Education Department in the four years and one hundred and ninety-four (194) academic records of students who majored in other departments were gathered. Eight hypotheses related to the effects of year of graduation, major and student characteristics of sex, age, transfer status, aptitude (as measured by ACT) and prior high school achievement on grade point average were tested. Multiple regression analyses were selected in order to test for any contributions that these variables might have on grade point average;It was concluded that the increase of the mean overall grade point average obtained by students at Iowa State University was less when compared to the national findings in other universities. Students who majored in the Industrial Education Department and students who majored in other departments received a different grade point average. Graphs which reported grade point average by student class level and subject areas show the difference of grades received by different majors. Year of graduation, major, HSR, ACT, transfer status, and sex linearly related to grade point average;The second section was to investigate possible causes of grade inflation at Iowa State University. A questionnaire which was designed to identify possible causes was constructed and administered to randomly-selected faculty members who were on campus in the spring of 1980. One hundred and twenty (120) members completed the questionnaire. Percentages were presented to summarize the findings;It was concluded that the availability of more options for students to maintain a high grade point average was a possible cause of grade inflation Iowa State University.</p

    Staphylococcus argenteus: An emerging subclinical bovine mastitis pathogen in Thailand

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    Background and Aim: Staphylococcus argenteus is an emerging species of the Staphylococcus aureus complex. It has usually been misidentified as S. aureus by conventional methods and its characteristics. S. argenteus is potentially emerging in both humans and animals with an increasing global distribution. This study aimed to differentiate and identify S. argenteus from S. aureus collected and isolated from milk samples of subclinical bovine mastitis cases in Maha Sarakham Province, Northeastern Thailand. Materials and Methods: Forty-two isolates of S. aureus were studied from 132 individual milk samples collected from subclinical bovine mastitis cases of 15 dairy farms in three districts of Maha Sarakham, Thailand. The identification was confirmed by conventional and immune-agglutination methods. Fifteen representative isolates which were suspected as being S. argenteus were analyzed by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). Results: The result from MALDI-TOF MS confirmed that seven from 15 isolates were S. argenteus and eight isolates were S. aureus. Conclusion: This study indicated that MALDI-TOF MS used as an identification and classification method could accurately differentiate the novel species, S. argenteus, from the S. aureus complex which is usually misdiagnosed. In addition, the identification of S. argenteus seems to be very limited in technical difficulty despite the fact that it may be the important causative pathogen in bovine mastitis as well as a pathogenic bacterium in food and milk. Therefore, it is essential for both bovine medicine and veterinary public health to emphasize and recognize this bacterial pathogen as an emerging disease of staphylococcal bacteria that there is a need for further study of S. argenteus infections

    Cryptosporidiosis: A zoonotic disease concern

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    Cryptosporidiosis is considered to be a crucial zoonotic disease caused by worldwide distributing parasitic protozoa called Cryptosporidium spp. Cryptosporidiosis becomes a major public health and veterinary concern by affecting in human and various host range species of animals. Essentially, its importance of infection is increasing because of the high incidence in young children, immunocompromised persons, or immunodeficiency syndrome patients, especially in HIV/AIDS, and it is also one of the most causes of mortality in those patients who infected with Cryptosporidium spp. as well as young animals. All domestic animal, livestock, wildlife, and human can be potential reservoirs that contribute Cryptosporidium spp. to food and surface waters and transmitted to other hosts through fecal-oral route. The oocyst stage of Cryptosporidium spp. can remain infective and resistant to various environmental exposure and also resistant to many general disinfecting agents including chlorination which normally used in water treatment. Therefore, the understanding of these zoonotic pathogens is very essential in both animal and human health. This review focuses on the biology, life cycle, transmission, diagnosis, treatment, prevention, and control of this protozoan infection to emphasize and remind as the significant One Health problem

    The Development of a Program for Evaluation Information and Communication Technology Literacy for Secondary Students

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    Evaluation of information technology and communication of secondary students is an evaluation of literacy, attitudes and practices concerning information technology and communication, which is a significant evaluation that enables teachers and relevant personnel to obtain correct information in order to improve the learning process and to enhance quality information technology and communication literacy. This research work aims to develop an evaluation program for information technology and communication for secondary students. The research was divided into 5 stages which were Stage 1) to study and analyze concepts and theories concerning the evaluation of information technology and communication literacy of secondary students and to interview 10 experts, Stage 2) to develop the criteria and indicators for information technology and communication literacy of secondary students, the criteria and indicators of which were drafted by the frameworks synthesized from documents and interviews with experts and presented to 5 experts for the consideration of relevance among indicators and criteria, Stage 3) to create an evaluation program for information technology and communication literacy of secondary students by using the indicators to create evaluation forms and to develop the evaluation program for information technology and communication literacy under digital environment, Stage 4) to test and improve the efficiency of the evaluation program for information technology and communication literacy of secondary students, the sample group of which included 2 schools, and Stage 5) to evaluate the information technology and communication literacy of the secondary students in the sample group. The tools used for data collection in this study were interview forms, an evaluation program for information technology and communication literacy, program evaluation forms for experts and evaluatees, program design evaluation form for experts and satisfaction evaluation forms of the evaluatees. The statistics used to analyze the data were standards statistics which were percentage, average and standard deviation. The findings revealed that: 1. The study of concepts and principles concerning information technology and communication literacy of secondary students consisted of 7 components which were definition, access, management, integration, evaluation, creation and communication. 2. The evaluation of information technology and communication literacy of secondary students consisted of 22 indicators with 7 main components. The evaluation criteria were completely developed by the experts. 3. The evaluation of information technology and communication literacy of the secondary students under the digital environment evaluated literacy, attitudes and practices. 4. The evaluation of information technology and communication literacy of the secondary students, implementation, evaluation of information technology and communication literacy of the sample group were mostly below the criteria, while the efficiency of the program was in a very high level. 5. The evaluation of information technology and communication literacy of the secondary student, according to the evaluation of the sample group, was mostly below the criteria, while the efficiency of the program and the satisfaction of the evaluates were in high levels

    Leptospira Seroprevalence in Free-Ranging Long-Tailed Macaques (Macaca fascicularis) at Kosumpee Forest Park, Maha Sarakham, Thailand

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    Background: Leptospirosis is a zoonotic disease that is ubiquitously distributed and is classified as a re-emerging infectious disease in humans and animals. Many serovars are carried by wildlife; all of them are capable of causing illness in humans. The purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence of Leptospirosis in wild long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis) at Kosumpee Forest Park, Mahasarakham, Thailand. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted at the park. Blood samples were collected via saphenous vein from 30 free-ranging long-tailed macaques. All samples were tested by the microscopic agglutination test. The LipL32 gene was used to detect pathogenic Leptospira in blood samples by conventional polymerase chain reaction. Results: Screening of the 30 wild macaques showed an overall Leptospira seroreactivity of 13.33%. Three of 30 macaques reacted against Leptospira serovar Shermani and one macaque was infected with Leptospira serovar Sejroe. None of the macaques presented clinical signs of leptospirosis. None of the blood samples showed the detection of the LipL32 gene. Conclusions: The results indicate that the long-tailed macaques at Kosumpee Forest Park may act as natural reservoirs for Leptospirosis. Further, the results provide evidence-based information indicating that several pathogenic Leptospira serovars are circulating in the wild macaques in the study area

    <i>Leptospira</i> Seroprevalence in Free-Ranging Long-Tailed Macaques (<i>Macaca fascicularis</i>) at Kosumpee Forest Park, Maha Sarakham, Thailand

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    Background: Leptospirosis is a zoonotic disease that is ubiquitously distributed and is classified as a re-emerging infectious disease in humans and animals. Many serovars are carried by wildlife; all of them are capable of causing illness in humans. The purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence of Leptospirosis in wild long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis) at Kosumpee Forest Park, Mahasarakham, Thailand. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted at the park. Blood samples were collected via saphenous vein from 30 free-ranging long-tailed macaques. All samples were tested by the microscopic agglutination test. The LipL32 gene was used to detect pathogenic Leptospira in blood samples by conventional polymerase chain reaction. Results: Screening of the 30 wild macaques showed an overall Leptospira seroreactivity of 13.33%. Three of 30 macaques reacted against Leptospira serovar Shermani and one macaque was infected with Leptospira serovar Sejroe. None of the macaques presented clinical signs of leptospirosis. None of the blood samples showed the detection of the LipL32 gene. Conclusions: The results indicate that the long-tailed macaques at Kosumpee Forest Park may act as natural reservoirs for Leptospirosis. Further, the results provide evidence-based information indicating that several pathogenic Leptospira serovars are circulating in the wild macaques in the study area

    Staphylococcus argenteus from rabbits in Thailand

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    Abstract Staphylococcus argenteus, a novel species of the genus Staphylococcus or a member of the S. aureus complex, is closely related to S. aureus and is usually misidentified. In this study, the presence of S. argenteus in isolated S. aureus was investigated in 67 rabbits with abscess lesions during 2014–2016. Among 19 S. aureus complex isolates, three were confirmed to be S. argenteus by matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization time‐of‐flight mass spectrometry, nonribosomal peptide synthetase gene amplification, and multilocus sequence type. All S. aureus complex isolates, including the S. aureus isolates, were examined for their antimicrobial resistance phenotype by disk diffusion and for their resistance genotype by PCR assays. Among the S. argenteus isolates, one was susceptible to all antimicrobial drugs and the other two were resistant to penicillin and doxycycline. In contrast, most S. aureus isolates were resistant to penicillin (37.5%), and gentamicin (12.5%). Moreover, S. aureus isolates harbored the blaZ, mecA, aacA‐aphD, and mrs(A) as well as mutations of gyrA and grlA, but S. argenteus isolates carried solely the blaZ. S. argenteus isolates were investigated for enterotoxin (sea‐sed) and virulence genes by PCR. One isolate carried sea, sec, and sed, whereas the other two isolates carried only sea or sed. No isolate carried seb and see. All three S. argenteus isolates carried hla, hlb, and clfA, followed by pvl, whereas coa, spa (IgG‐binding region), and spa (x region) were not detected in the three isolates. This paper presents the first identification of S. argenteus from rabbits in Thailand. S. argenteus might be pathogenic because the isolates carried virulence genes. Moreover, antimicrobial resistance was observed. Investigations of this new bacterial species should be conducted in other animal species as well as in humans

    Detection and drug resistance profile of Escherichia coli from subclinical mastitis cows and water supply in dairy farms in Saraburi Province, Thailand

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    Subclinical mastitis is a persistent problem in dairy farms worldwide. Environmental Escherichia coli is the bacterium predominantly responsible for this condition. In Thailand, subclinical mastitis in dairy cows is usually treated with various antibiotics, which could lead to antibiotic resistance in bacteria. E. coli is also a reservoir of many antibiotic resistance genes, which can be conveyed to other bacteria. In this study, the presence of E. coli in milk and water samples was reported, among which enteropathogenic E. coli was predominant, followed by enteroaggregative E. coli and enterohemorrhagic E. coli, which was found only in milk samples. Twenty-one patterns of antibiotic resistance were identified in this study. Ampicillin- and carbenicillin-resistant E. coli was the most common among the bacterial isolates from water samples. Meanwhile, resistance to ampicillin, carbenicillin, and sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim was the pattern found most commonly in the E. coli from milk samples. Notably, only the E. coli from water samples possessed ESBL phenotype and carried antibiotic resistance genes, blaTEM and blaCMY-2. This indicates that pathogenic E. coli in dairy farms is also exposed to antibiotics and could potentially transfer these genes to other pathogenic bacteria under certain conditions
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