| Literature DB >> 26248712 |
Amy E Bauer1, Sonora Olivas2, Maria Cooper3, Heidie Hornstra4, Paul Keim5, Talima Pearson6, April J Johnson7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Coxiella burnetii is the etiologic agent of Q fever, a zoonotic disease causing influenza-like illness, pregnancy loss, cardiovascular disease and chronic fatigue syndrome in people. C. burnetii is considered to be enzootic in ruminants, but clinical signs of infection do not always manifest. National studies have documented the presence of C. burnetii in dairy herds in Indiana. This represents an opportunity to better characterize the distribution and prevalence of C. burnetii infection at the state scale, allowing evaluation of the need for surveillance and response planning to occur at this level. A cross-sectional study was conducted to estimate the herd prevalence of C. burnetii in commercial cattle dairies in Indiana and characterize the strains of C. burnetii within these dairies.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26248712 PMCID: PMC4528813 DOI: 10.1186/s12917-015-0517-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Fig. 1Geographic distribution of samples tested for C. burnetii. Indiana counties with bulk tank milk samples tested for C. burnetii. Counties with bulk tank milk samples that tested positive for C. burnetii are coded green. Thick lines indicate the regional boundaries that were defined by Public Health Preparedness Districts. Dots indicate the number of dairy herds per county in 2012 as reported by the USDA National Census of Agriculture. Counties without dots were not reported as individual counties but included in the overall total of 2401 dairy herds
Geographic distribution of dairy herds and estimated herd prevalence of C. burnetii
| Region | Total regional herdsa | %Total herds | Total samples | %Total samples | Samples tested | %Samples tested | Positive samples | % Positive samples | Estimated prevalence | 95 % C.I. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| North | 1622 | 67.6 % | 845 | 72.4 % | 217 | 68.7 % | 129 | 66.8 % | 59.4 % | 52.8–65.8 % |
| Central | 408 | 17.0 % | 173 | 14.8 % | 57 | 18.0 % | 40 | 20.7 % | 70.1 % | 57.4–81.0 % |
| South | 371 | 15.4 % | 149 | 12.8 % | 42 | 13.3 % | 24 | 12.4 % | 57.1 % | 42.0–71.4 % |
| Total | 2401 | 1167 | 316 | 193 | 60.8 % | 55.3–66.0 % |
aTotal Regional Herds obtained from the 2012 Census of Agriculture [37]. These numbers include, but are not exclusive to, commercial dairy herds
Fig. 2Geographic distribution of DNA samples submitted for C. burnetii genotyping. Thick lines indicate regional boundaries as defined by Public Health Preparedness Districts. Lake County, outlined in the Northern region, had no samples testing positive for C. burnetii by our cutoff criteria, but a sample demonstrating a CT greater than 36.5 was submitted for genotyping
Genotyping results based upon SNP analysis
| ST results |
|
|
| Exclude | Exclude | Failure to genotype | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of samples | 71 | 2 | 1 | 5 | 26 | 83 | 188 |
Geographic distribution of sequence types of C. burnetii
| Region |
|
| ST not identified | % ST identified |
| 95 % C.I. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Northern | 50 | 1 | 78b | 60.5 % | 93.0 % | 90.7–99.9 % |
| Central | 10a | 1a | 24 | 50.0 % | 90.9 %a | 62.7–99.6 % |
| Southern | 11 | 0 | 12 | 47.8 % | 100 % | 76.2–100 % |
| Total | 71a | 2a | 114 | 64.0 % | 97.3 %a | 91.2–99.5 % |
aIndicates that the farm with both ST20 and ST8 was not included in these calculations
bIncludes a sample from Lake County that was not identified as positive, but demonstrated a CT greater than the 36.5 cutoff value