A comparative study on the clinical, parasitological and molecular diagnosis of bovine trypanosomosis in Uganda

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dc.contributor.author Magona, Joseph W.
dc.contributor.author Mayende, J.S.P.
dc.contributor.author Olaho-Mukani, W.
dc.contributor.author Jonsson, N.N.
dc.contributor.author Welburn, S.C.
dc.contributor.author Eisler, M.C.
dc.contributor.author Coleman, P.G.
dc.contributor.editor Boomker, Jacob Diederik Frederik
dc.date.accessioned 2012-01-19T07:28:25Z
dc.date.available 2012-01-19T07:28:25Z
dc.date.created 2011
dc.date.issued 2003
dc.description The articles have been scanned with a HP Scanjet 8300; 600dpi, saved in TIFF format. Adobe Acrobat v.9 was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to the final presentation PDF-format. en
dc.description.abstract The clinical, parasitological and molecular diagnosis of bovine trypanosomosis were compared using samples from 250 zebu cattle exposed to natural trypanosome challenge in Uganda. Clinical examination, molecular and parasitological diagnoses detected 184 (73.6%), 96 (38.4 %) and 36 (14.4%) as diseased, respectively. The sensitivity and specificity of clinical examination were 87.5% and 35%, and 78 % and 27 % based on molecular and parasitological diagnoses, as gold standards, respectively. Of the 33, 3, 13 and 12 parasitological-positive cattle that had Trypanosoma brucei, Trypanosoma congolense, Trypanosoma vivax or mixed infections, 78 %, 33 %, 84 % and 100% respectively manifested clinical signs. Of the 24, 89, 12 , 3, 6 and 27 cattle detected by molecular diagnosis to have mixed infections, T. brucei, T. vivax, T. congolense forest-, Savannah- and Tsavo-type, 100%, 83%, 91 %, 100%, 67% and 81 % had clinical signs, respectively. In conclusion, treatment of cattle based on clinical examination may clear up to 87.5% or 78% of the cases that would be positive by either molecular or parasitological diagnosis, respectively. Under field conditions, in the absence of simple and portable diagnostic tools or access to laboratory facilities, veterinarians could rely on clinical diagnosis to screen and treat cases of bovine trypanosomosis presented by farmers before confirmatory diagnosis in diagnostic centres for few unclear cases is sought. en
dc.description.librarian mn2012 en
dc.description.sponsorship Animal Health Programme of the Department for Intemational Development (DFID) of UK. en
dc.identifier.citation Magona, JW, Mayende, JSP, Olaho-Mukani, W, Coleman, PG, Jonsson, NN, Welburn, SC & Eisler, MC 2003, 'A comparative study on the clinical, parasitological and molecular diagnosis of bovine trypanosomosis in Uganda'. Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research, vol. 70, no. 3, pp. 213-218. en
dc.identifier.issn 0030-2465
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/17840
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Pretoria : Agricultural Research Council, ARC-Onderstepoort Veterinary Institute and the University of Pretoria, Faculty of Veterinary Science en
dc.rights © ARC-Onderstepoort and Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria (original). © University of Pretoria. Dept of Library Services (digital). en
dc.subject Veterinary medicine en
dc.subject Cattle en
dc.subject Diagnosis en
dc.subject Trypanosomosis en
dc.subject.lcsh Veterinary medicine -- South Africa
dc.subject.lcsh Cattle -- Diseases en
dc.title A comparative study on the clinical, parasitological and molecular diagnosis of bovine trypanosomosis in Uganda en
dc.type Article en
dc.type Text en_ZA


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