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Comparison of Blood Polymerase Chain Reaction and Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay for Detection of Mycobacterium Avium Subsp. Paratuberculosis Infection in Cattle and Sheep
Author(s) -
Ramón A. Juste,
Joseba M. Garrido,
Mariví Geijó,
Natalia Elguezabal,
Gorka Adúriz,
Raquel Atxaerandio,
Iker A. Sevilla
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.529
H-Index - 78
eISSN - 1943-4936
pISSN - 1040-6387
DOI - 10.1177/104063870501700409
Subject(s) - paratuberculosis , kappa , flock , polymerase chain reaction , biology , offspring , veterinary medicine , feces , medicine , zoology , pathology , mycobacterium , microbiology and biotechnology , tuberculosis , gene , pregnancy , linguistics , philosophy , biochemistry , genetics
A study was carried out to compare the performance of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and blood polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for diagnosis of paratuberculosis in cattle and sheep. For cattle, a set of 278 samples from 1 paratuberculosis-affected Friesian farm was used; it included 80 ELISA-positive samples and 198 ELISA-negative samples from an age-matched group. Ninety-four samples were from heifers and 184 were from 2–5-year-old cows. The overall analysis showed a clear association (Fisher exact test [FET] P = 0.0049) but a weak negative agreement (45.3%, kappa = −0.1665 ± 0.0994) between the 2 tests. It reflected a moderate agreement among heifers (87.7%, kappa = 0.4471 ± 0.2435) and a moderate disagreement among cows (62.7%, kappa = −0.3670 ± 0.1057). For sheep, 496 blood samples from 53 Latxa dairy flocks were used; 180 of the blood samples were from dam/offspring pairs. The overall association between the 2 tests on ovine samples was strong (FET, P = 0.0005), whereas the agreement was low (kappa = 0.1622 ± 0.1188). There was slightly better agreement for ewes (kappa = 0.2135 ± 0.1992) than for lambs (kappa = 0.1193 ± 0.1301). There was also a highly unlikely proportion of dam/offspring positive results (FET, P < 0.0001, kappa = 0.6269 ± 0.1854). Four of 6 lambs that were necropsied 1 year after testing had paratuberculosis microscopic lesions in the ileocecal valve (3 lambs) or a PCR-positive result (4 lambs). These results suggest that blood PCR testing might be a potentially useful new approach in paratuberculosis diagnosis, especially in young animals.

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