Title Evaluation of possible cross-infection of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (M. a. paratuberculosis) between sheep, goats and cattle in Norway.
Author(s) Holstad G1*, Djønne B1, Sigurðardóttir Ó1, Pavlík I2, Ahrens P3, Tharaldsen J1, Schönheit J1, Storset A4, Nyberg O1.
Institution(s) 1 National Veterinary Institute, Post Box 8156 Dep., N-0033 Oslo, Norway. 2 Veterinary Research Institute, Hudcova 70, Brno 621 32, Czech republic. 3 Danish Veterinary Laboratory, Bulowsvei 27 DK-1790, Copenhagen, Denmark. 4 Norwegian School of Veterinary Science, Post Box 8146 Dep., N-0033 Oslo, Norway.
Source Seventh International Colloquium on Paratuberculosis
Section 7: Epidemiology and Control
Abstract

Introduction.

There has been uncertainty about the existence of a strictly goat-pathogenic M. paratuberculosis strain in Norway. The aim of the present study was to obtain information about cross-infection of M. paratuberculosis between ruminant species in Norway.

Materials and methods.

From 1966 to 1999 samples from 5152 cattle and 33100 goats were examined for M. paratuberculosis by bacterial culture. All goat and 97 cattle-samples were collected from animals suspected for paratuberculosis. Samples from 5055 cattle were examined in a national control and surveillance program. In one cattle herd (A), positive seroreactions were found in eight cows. Paratuberculosis had been diagnosed in 31 goats before 1985, but there had been no goats in the herd since 1992. Paratuberculosis was confirmed by culture from one of these cows, and the animals were slaughtered. Pathogical and bacteriological examinations were performed on 45 animals. Altogether 58 goat isolates of M. paratuberculosis from 58 herds and 5 cattle isolates from 4 herds were typed by RFLP and AFLP analyses. One goat and two cattle isolates originated from herd A.

Results and discussion.

M. paratuberculosis infections has been more common in goats than cattle in Norway. In a few farms infection was diagnosed both in goats and cattle. Cross-infection between the different ruminant species cannot be excluded. Paratuberculosis was diagnosed in two cows in herd A, and the bacterial isolates had the same RFLP and AFLP patterns (BC1/g) as the isolate detected from a goat in this herd. There was no information about import of infected cattle to this herd. The majority of the other Norwegian goat isolates examined, and the isolates detected from cattle imported from Sweden and Denmark had the same pattern. These findings might indicate that the same M. paratuberculosis strains infect goats and cattle in Norway, and cattle in the neighbouring countries.

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