Prevalence and age-related variation of Cryptosporidium species and genotypes in dairy calves

Fifteen dairy farms in seven states on the east coast of the US were each visited on two consecutive years to determinate the prevalence of Cryptosporidium species in pre-weaned (5 days to 2 months) and post-weaned calves (3–11 months), respectively. After each of 971 fecal specimens collected direc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Veterinary parasitology 2004-06, Vol.122 (2), p.103-117
Hauptverfasser: Santı́n, Mónica, Trout, James M, Xiao, Lihua, Zhou, Ling, Greiner, Ellis, Fayer, Ronald
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container_end_page 117
container_issue 2
container_start_page 103
container_title Veterinary parasitology
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creator Santı́n, Mónica
Trout, James M
Xiao, Lihua
Zhou, Ling
Greiner, Ellis
Fayer, Ronald
description Fifteen dairy farms in seven states on the east coast of the US were each visited on two consecutive years to determinate the prevalence of Cryptosporidium species in pre-weaned (5 days to 2 months) and post-weaned calves (3–11 months), respectively. After each of 971 fecal specimens collected directly from each calf was sieved and subjected to density gradient centrifugation to remove debris and concentrate oocysts, specimens were examined by immunofluorescence microscopy, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). For all PCR-positive specimens the 18S rRNA gene of Cryptosporidium was sequenced. Cryptosporidium was identified from all farms. Types of housing appeared to have no influence with regard to prevalence of infection. Of 971 calves, 345 were infected with Cryptosporidium (35.5%), but more pre-weaned calves (253 of 503; 50.3%) than post-weaned calves (92 of 468; 19.7%) were found to be infected. A total of 278 PCR-positive specimens characterized by gene sequencing revealed Cryptosporidium parvum, Cryptosporidium andersoni, and two unnamed Cryptosporidium genotypes Bovine B ( AY120911) and deer-like genotype ( AY120910). The prevalence of these Cryptosporidium species and genotypes appeared to be age related between pre- and post-weaned calves. C. parvum, the only zoonotic species/genotype, constituted 85% of the Cryptosporidium infections in pre-weaned calves but only 1% of the Cryptosporidium infections in post-weaned calves. These findings clearly demonstrate that earlier reports on the presence and prevalence of C. parvum in post-weaned cattle that were based solely on oocyst morphology must be reassessed using molecular methods to validate species and genotype. This finding also indicates that persons handling or otherwise exposed to calves under 2 months of age are at greater risk of zoonotic infection from Cryptosporidium than the risk of infection from exposure to older calves.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.vetpar.2004.03.020
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subjects Calves
Cryptosporidium
Genotyping
Prevalence
Zoonoses
title Prevalence and age-related variation of Cryptosporidium species and genotypes in dairy calves
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