Effect of a test and control program for Johne's disease in Victorian beef herds 1992-2002

Objective To report on progress in Johne's disease (JD) control in infected beef herds participating in the Victorian Johne's disease test and control program (TCP). Procedure Clinical histories and JD testing data recorded by the Department of Primary Industries were analysed for 18 beef...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAustralian veterinary journal Vol. 82; no. 3; pp. 164 - 166
Main Authors Jubb, T.F, Galvin, J.W
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.03.2004
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Summary:Objective To report on progress in Johne's disease (JD) control in infected beef herds participating in the Victorian Johne's disease test and control program (TCP). Procedure Clinical histories and JD testing data recorded by the Department of Primary Industries were analysed for 18 beef herds participating in the TCP. The herds were required to conduct annual whole herd tests with an absorbed ELISA, cull reactors and control the grazing of young cattle to minimise infection. Results Testing of over 11,000 animals identified 68 reactors giving an average prevalence of reactors at the first whole‐herd test round (T1) of 0.77%. There had been 20 clinical cases detected in the 7 years before the TCP started and two cases detected in the 10 years after TCP started. Most reactors and all clinical cases were born before the TCP started. Of 34 reactors necropsied, 25 (74%) were confirmed to have JD by histology or culture of tissues. The modal age of reactors and clinical cases was 5 and 6 years respectively. Six herds completed the program by achieving three successive negative whole herd tests, four herds dropped out and eight continued to test. There were 18 reactors detected at T1 and 33 reactors that were negative at T1 but detected at subsequent tests. Conclusion The TCP was associated with a marked decline in clinical cases. The similar age distributions of clinical cases and reactors probably meant that testing detected animals for which clinical disease was imminent. Whether the measures used in the TCP were adequate to control the disease in beef herds could not be determined because of the long incubation period of the disease. The relatively high proportion of the reactors investigated that were confirmed as infected provided confidence that the test was continuing to operate at a high specificity. If all unconfirmed reactors were presumed to be uninfected, the minimum specificity of the ELISA was 99.83%. The sensitivity of the ELISA appeared to be very low because of the large number of reactors that were negative at T1 but positive at later tests.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-VK6KBVHM-3
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ArticleID:AVJ164
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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content type line 23
ISSN:0005-0423
1751-0813
DOI:10.1111/j.1751-0813.2004.tb12649.x