| Literature DB >> 29788965 |
I I Shabana1,2, N M Alhadlag3, H Zaraket4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The diagnosis of anaplasmosis is rather conflicting with other haemoprotozoans. Hence, the study aimed to compare and evaluate the efficiency of competitive ELISA (cELISA), indirect fluorescence antibody (IFA), and Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for precise diagnosis of Anaplasma spp. and to assess their concordance with microscopic examination (ME).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29788965 PMCID: PMC5964659 DOI: 10.1186/s12917-018-1489-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Fig. 1Study flow chart
Basic demographics of the sampled animals
| Categories | ||
|---|---|---|
| Gender | Female | 119 (38.1%) |
| Male | 193 (61.9%) | |
| Host | Sheep | 189 (60.6%) |
| Goat | 123 (39.4%) | |
| Source | Imported | 123 (39.4%) |
| Local | 189 (60.6%) | |
| Age | Age group I (2 m-2y) | 128 (41.5%) |
| Age group II (2y-4y) | 149 (47%) | |
| Age group III (4y-6y) | 35 (12%) |
Fig. 2a, b Anaplasma species under microscope appears as small and roughly spherical intraerythrocytic parasite measuring about 0.2 to 0.5 μm
Microscopic examination
| Host | Demographic factor | Positive animals percentage | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sheep ( | Gender | Male (128) | 66 (34.9%)a |
| Female (61) | 20 (10.6%) | ||
| Age | Group I (84) | 47 (24.9%)a | |
| Group II (89) | 36 (19.0%) | ||
| Group III (16) | 3 (1.6%) | ||
| Source | imported (82) | 53 (28.1%) | |
| Local (107) | 33 (17.5%) | ||
| Goat ( | Gender | Male (65) | 38 (30.9%)a |
| Female (58) | 12 (9.8%) | ||
| Age | Group I (44) | 22 (17.9%)a | |
| Group II (60) | 24 (19.5%) | ||
| Group III (19) | 4 (3.3%) | ||
| Source | Imported (41) | 34 (27.6%) | |
| Local (82) | 16 ( 13.0%) | ||
Age group I (2 months to 2 years), group II (> 2 -4 years), group III (> 4 - 6 years)
aSignificant variation
Seroprevalence of anaplasma species among sheep and goats
| Host | Serological assay | Gender | **Age | Source | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | Group I | Group II | Group III | Imported | Local | ||
| Sheep | cELISA | 70 (37.0%) | 23 (12.2%) | 52 (61.1%) | 39 (43.8%) | 2 (12.5%) | 59 (71.1%) | 34 (31.7%) |
| IFA | 82 (43.4%) | 31 (16.4%) | 60 (31.7%) | 45 (23.8%) | 8 (4.2%) | 69 (36.5%) | 44 (23.3%) | |
| Goat | cELISA | 39 (60.0%)* | 16 (27.6%) | 26 (59.1%) | 25 (41.7%) | 4 (21.1%) | 36 (87.8%) | 19 (23.1%) |
| IFA | 45 (36.6%)* | 21 (27.6%) | 30 (24.4%) | 29 (23.6%) | 7 (5.7%) | 43 (34.9%) | 23 (18.7%) | |
* statistically significant (P-value is < 0.05)
**statistically highly significant (P-value is < 0.01)
Fig. 3a, b Anaplasma species under fluorescent microscope appears green fluorescent small cocci with a red back ground
Sensitivity and specificity of IFA as compared with gold standard (ELISA and ME) of anaplasma spp.
| Gold Standard | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive | Negative | Total | ||
| IFA test | positive | 125 | 11 | 136 |
| Negative | 0 | 153 | 153 | |
| Total* | 125 | 164 | 289 | |
* statistically significant (P-value is < 0.05)
**statistically highly significant (P-value is < 0.01)
Fig. 4Agarose gel electrophoreses of PCR products of Anaplasma ovis amplified from DNA purified from sheep and goats blood samples. Right arrowhead indicates position of the 271 bp PCR product
Fig. 5Agarose gel electrophoreses of PCR products of Anaplasma phagocytophilum amplified from DNA purified from sheep and goats blood samples. Right arrowhead indicates position of the 236 bp PCR product
Molecular identification
| Anaplasma spp. | Gender | **Age | Source | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | Female | Group I | Group II | Group III | Imported | Local | ||
| Sheep |
| 35 (18.5%) | 14 (7.4%) | 26 (13.8%) | 23 (12.2%) | 0 | 30 (15.9%) | 19 (10.0%) |
|
| 50 (26.5%) | 24 (12.7%) | 37 (19.6%) | 31 (16.4%) | 6 (4.8%) | 38 (20.1%) | 36 (19.0%) | |
| Goat |
| *19 (60.0%) | 11 (27.6%) | 13 (15.4%) | 13 (15.4%) | 4 (3.3%) | 16 (13.0%) | 14 (11.4%) |
|
| 20 (16.3%) | 21 (17.0%) | 23 (18.7%) | 16 (13.0%) | 2 (1.6%) | 15 (12.2%) | 26 (21.1%) | |
* statistically significant (P-value is < 0.05)
**statistically highly significant (P-value is < 0.01)