| Literature DB >> 28194625 |
Brieuc G A Cossic1,2, Brice Adjahoutonon2, Pierre Gloaguen3, Gui Lov Dibanganga4, Gael Maganga4,5, Pascal Leroy6,7, Ewan T MacLeod1, Kim Picozzi8.
Abstract
A longitudinal study was conducted within a cattle ranch in Gabon to determine the diminazene aceturate (Berenil) index (DAI) in a group of Zebu, raised under low tsetse density; this measure providing an assessment of trypanosomiasis risk. The objective was to evaluate the trypanosomiasis pressure thus informing trypanosomiasis control methods and cattle management. Twenty female adult Zebu were monitored for 24 weeks during the dry season. Blood samples were collected on a weekly basis and subjected to parasitological and haematological analysis (n = 480), using the buffy-coat method and the packed cell volume value (PCV), respectively, infected animals were treated with a single intramuscular injection of diminazene aceturate (8 mg/kg). Twenty-nine single infectious events were recorded and a DAI of 1.45 was calculated. Two trypanosome species were identified: Trypanosoma congolense (96.2%) and Trypanosoma vivax (3.8%). The mean PCV value of the infected animals was lower (26.6) compared to non-infected animals (32.0). This study shows that DAI may be a useful tool to assess trypanosomiasis. However, this is a time-consuming method that may be improved by using randomly selected sentinel animals to adapt the chemoprophylactic schemes, hence decreasing the costs and the drug resistance risk.Entities:
Keywords: African animal trypanosomiasis; Berenil index; Diminazen-aceturate; Gabon; Tsetse; Zebu
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28194625 PMCID: PMC5323502 DOI: 10.1007/s11250-017-1239-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Anim Health Prod ISSN: 0049-4747 Impact factor: 1.559
Summary of African animal trypanosomiasis epidemiological studies conducted within the La Nyanga Ranch in Gabon
| Year | Breed | Trypanosome prevalence | Diagnostic method |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1987; Trail et al. ( | N’Dama | 25% | BCM |
|
| 1988; Trail et al. ( | N’Dama | 31% | BCM |
|
| 1989; Trail et al. ( | N’Dama | 9% | BCM |
|
| 1985–1988; Ordner et al. ( | N’Dama | 7.5; 10.1% | BCM |
|
| 1985–1988; Ordner et al. ( | Nguni | 25.9% | BCM |
|
| 1985–1988; Ordner et al. ( | N’Dama × Nguni | 16.5% | BCM |
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| 1991; Leak et al. ( | N’Dama | 5.4% | BCM | Both species detected in tsetse flies and cattle |
| 2014; Maganga et al. ( | N’Dama | 57.3% | ITS1 PCR |
|
(BCM buffy-coat method, PCR polymerase chain reaction)
Fig. 1PCV values. The median for the herd is represented by the central line. The boundaries reflecting the mean PCV value for non-infected animals are represented by the top line (showing the constant value of 32) and the mean PCV value at the moment of the infection is on the bottom line (showing the constant value of 25.6)