Aa. Adesiyun et Js. Kaminjolo, PREVALENCE AND EPIDEMIOLOGY OF SELECTED ENTERIC INFECTIONS OF LIVESTOCK IN TRINIDAD, Preventive veterinary medicine, 19(3-4), 1994, pp. 151-165
In a study of diarrhoeic and non-diarrhoeic livestock (cattle, pigs an
d sheep) from 50 farms in Trinidad, the prevalence of bacterial (Campy
lobacter, Salmonella, Yersinia and Escherichia coli), parasitic (cocci
dia, Cryptosporidium and enteric helminths) and viral (rotavirus) ente
ropathogens in faeces or rectal swabs was determined. Occurrence of th
e enteropathogens was tested for association with age, health status,
animal species and mixed infections. Of 423 diarrhoeic animals tested,
Salmonella was isolated from 21 (5.0%), Campylobacter from 191 (45.2%
) and Yersinia from three (0.7%), while the corresponding prevalence f
rom 270 non-diarrhoeic controls was eight (3.0%) (chi(2) 1.19, P = 0.2
8), 119 (44.1%) (chi(2) 0.04, P = 0.85) and four (1.5%) (chi(2) 0.8, P
= 0.39), respectively. Verocytotoxigenic E. coli and heat-labile toxi
n-producing E. coil were isolated from 51 (13.7%) and five (1.3%), res
pectively, of 373 diarrhoeic animals but the corresponding prevalence
from 258 non-diarrhoeic animals was 39 (15.1%) (chi(2) 0.15, P = 0.7)
and five (1.9%) (chi(2) 0.07, P = 0.8), respectively. Cryptosporidium
oocysts were detected in 67 (16.5%) of 406 diarrhoeic animals and from
31 (12.1%) of 257 non-diarrhoeic animals (chi(2) 2.13, P = 0.15). For
147 diarrhoeic animals tested for coccidia, 64 (43.5%) were positive
compared with 34 (37.8%) of 90 non-diarrhoeic animals (chi(2) 0.54, P
= 0.49). The prevalence of rotavirus infection was significantly (P le
ss than or equal to 0.001, chi(2) 37.8) higher in diarrhoeic animals (
39.9%, 112 of 281) than in non-diarrhoeic animals (13.4%, 26 of 194).