Patterns of Fasciola hepatica infection in Danish dairy cattle: implications for on-farm control of the parasite based on different diagnostic methods

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Patterns of Fasciola hepatica infection in Danish dairy cattle : implications for on-farm control of the parasite based on different diagnostic methods. / Takeuchi-Storm, Nao; Denwood, Matthew; Petersen, Heidi Huus; Enemark, Heidi Larsen; Stensgaard, Anna-Sofie; Sengupta, Mita Eva; Beesley, Nicola Jane; Hodgkinson, Jane; Williams, Diana; Thamsborg, Stig Milan.

In: Parasites & Vectors, Vol. 11, 674, 2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Takeuchi-Storm, N, Denwood, M, Petersen, HH, Enemark, HL, Stensgaard, A-S, Sengupta, ME, Beesley, NJ, Hodgkinson, J, Williams, D & Thamsborg, SM 2018, 'Patterns of Fasciola hepatica infection in Danish dairy cattle: implications for on-farm control of the parasite based on different diagnostic methods', Parasites & Vectors, vol. 11, 674. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-018-3248-z

APA

Takeuchi-Storm, N., Denwood, M., Petersen, H. H., Enemark, H. L., Stensgaard, A-S., Sengupta, M. E., Beesley, N. J., Hodgkinson, J., Williams, D., & Thamsborg, S. M. (2018). Patterns of Fasciola hepatica infection in Danish dairy cattle: implications for on-farm control of the parasite based on different diagnostic methods. Parasites & Vectors, 11, [674]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-018-3248-z

Vancouver

Takeuchi-Storm N, Denwood M, Petersen HH, Enemark HL, Stensgaard A-S, Sengupta ME et al. Patterns of Fasciola hepatica infection in Danish dairy cattle: implications for on-farm control of the parasite based on different diagnostic methods. Parasites & Vectors. 2018;11. 674. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-018-3248-z

Author

Takeuchi-Storm, Nao ; Denwood, Matthew ; Petersen, Heidi Huus ; Enemark, Heidi Larsen ; Stensgaard, Anna-Sofie ; Sengupta, Mita Eva ; Beesley, Nicola Jane ; Hodgkinson, Jane ; Williams, Diana ; Thamsborg, Stig Milan. / Patterns of Fasciola hepatica infection in Danish dairy cattle : implications for on-farm control of the parasite based on different diagnostic methods. In: Parasites & Vectors. 2018 ; Vol. 11.

Bibtex

@article{7b31e43cc7b441a3b6044245b18965e2,
title = "Patterns of Fasciola hepatica infection in Danish dairy cattle: implications for on-farm control of the parasite based on different diagnostic methods",
abstract = "BackgroundBovine fasciolosis is an economically important livestock disease in Europe, and represents a particular challenge for organic farms, where cattle are grazed extensively and the use of anthelmintic is limited. A two-year longitudinal study was conducted on two conventional and two organic Danish dairy farms to examine the current temporal trend of F. hepatica infection on-farm, and to gather data of practical relevance for parasite control. Data were collected both at the herd and individual level using currently available diagnostic methods: a commercial serum antibody ELISA, a commercial copro-antigen ELISA, faecal egg counts, and monthly bulk tank milk (BTM) ELISA. The temporal patterns (animal age, farm-level temporal trends and seasonality) in the animal-level test results were analysed by generalised additive mixed models (GAMM).ResultsPatterns of infection differed substantially between the farms, due to different grazing management and anthelmintic use. However, animals were first infected at the age of 1.5–2 years (heifers), and most at-risk animals sero-converted in autumn, suggesting that summer infections in snails prevail in Denmark. Our results also suggest that the lifespan of the parasite could be over 2 years, as several cows showed signs of low grade infection even after several years of continuous indoor housing without access to freshly-cut grass. The serum antibody ELISA was able to detect infection first, whereas both copro-antigen ELISA and faecal egg counts tended to increase in the same animals at a later point. Decreasing BTM antibody levels were seen on the two farms that started anthelmintic treatment during the study.ConclusionsWhile important differences between farms and over time were seen due to varying grazing management, anthelmintic treatment and climatic conditions, the young stock was consistently seen as the main high-risk group and at least one farm also had suspected transmission (re-infection) within the lactating herd. Careful interpretation of test results is necessary for older cows as they can show persistent infections several years after exposure has stopped. Rigorous treatment regimens can reduce BTM ELISA values, but further research is needed to develop a non-medicinal approach for sustainable management of bovine fasciolosis.",
keywords = "Fasciola hepatica, Transmission, Dairy, Diagnostic, ELISA, Denmark",
author = "Nao Takeuchi-Storm and Matthew Denwood and Petersen, {Heidi Huus} and Enemark, {Heidi Larsen} and Anna-Sofie Stensgaard and Sengupta, {Mita Eva} and Beesley, {Nicola Jane} and Jane Hodgkinson and Diana Williams and Thamsborg, {Stig Milan}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1186/s13071-018-3248-z",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "Parasites & Vectors",
issn = "1756-3305",
publisher = "BioMed Central",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Patterns of Fasciola hepatica infection in Danish dairy cattle

T2 - implications for on-farm control of the parasite based on different diagnostic methods

AU - Takeuchi-Storm, Nao

AU - Denwood, Matthew

AU - Petersen, Heidi Huus

AU - Enemark, Heidi Larsen

AU - Stensgaard, Anna-Sofie

AU - Sengupta, Mita Eva

AU - Beesley, Nicola Jane

AU - Hodgkinson, Jane

AU - Williams, Diana

AU - Thamsborg, Stig Milan

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - BackgroundBovine fasciolosis is an economically important livestock disease in Europe, and represents a particular challenge for organic farms, where cattle are grazed extensively and the use of anthelmintic is limited. A two-year longitudinal study was conducted on two conventional and two organic Danish dairy farms to examine the current temporal trend of F. hepatica infection on-farm, and to gather data of practical relevance for parasite control. Data were collected both at the herd and individual level using currently available diagnostic methods: a commercial serum antibody ELISA, a commercial copro-antigen ELISA, faecal egg counts, and monthly bulk tank milk (BTM) ELISA. The temporal patterns (animal age, farm-level temporal trends and seasonality) in the animal-level test results were analysed by generalised additive mixed models (GAMM).ResultsPatterns of infection differed substantially between the farms, due to different grazing management and anthelmintic use. However, animals were first infected at the age of 1.5–2 years (heifers), and most at-risk animals sero-converted in autumn, suggesting that summer infections in snails prevail in Denmark. Our results also suggest that the lifespan of the parasite could be over 2 years, as several cows showed signs of low grade infection even after several years of continuous indoor housing without access to freshly-cut grass. The serum antibody ELISA was able to detect infection first, whereas both copro-antigen ELISA and faecal egg counts tended to increase in the same animals at a later point. Decreasing BTM antibody levels were seen on the two farms that started anthelmintic treatment during the study.ConclusionsWhile important differences between farms and over time were seen due to varying grazing management, anthelmintic treatment and climatic conditions, the young stock was consistently seen as the main high-risk group and at least one farm also had suspected transmission (re-infection) within the lactating herd. Careful interpretation of test results is necessary for older cows as they can show persistent infections several years after exposure has stopped. Rigorous treatment regimens can reduce BTM ELISA values, but further research is needed to develop a non-medicinal approach for sustainable management of bovine fasciolosis.

AB - BackgroundBovine fasciolosis is an economically important livestock disease in Europe, and represents a particular challenge for organic farms, where cattle are grazed extensively and the use of anthelmintic is limited. A two-year longitudinal study was conducted on two conventional and two organic Danish dairy farms to examine the current temporal trend of F. hepatica infection on-farm, and to gather data of practical relevance for parasite control. Data were collected both at the herd and individual level using currently available diagnostic methods: a commercial serum antibody ELISA, a commercial copro-antigen ELISA, faecal egg counts, and monthly bulk tank milk (BTM) ELISA. The temporal patterns (animal age, farm-level temporal trends and seasonality) in the animal-level test results were analysed by generalised additive mixed models (GAMM).ResultsPatterns of infection differed substantially between the farms, due to different grazing management and anthelmintic use. However, animals were first infected at the age of 1.5–2 years (heifers), and most at-risk animals sero-converted in autumn, suggesting that summer infections in snails prevail in Denmark. Our results also suggest that the lifespan of the parasite could be over 2 years, as several cows showed signs of low grade infection even after several years of continuous indoor housing without access to freshly-cut grass. The serum antibody ELISA was able to detect infection first, whereas both copro-antigen ELISA and faecal egg counts tended to increase in the same animals at a later point. Decreasing BTM antibody levels were seen on the two farms that started anthelmintic treatment during the study.ConclusionsWhile important differences between farms and over time were seen due to varying grazing management, anthelmintic treatment and climatic conditions, the young stock was consistently seen as the main high-risk group and at least one farm also had suspected transmission (re-infection) within the lactating herd. Careful interpretation of test results is necessary for older cows as they can show persistent infections several years after exposure has stopped. Rigorous treatment regimens can reduce BTM ELISA values, but further research is needed to develop a non-medicinal approach for sustainable management of bovine fasciolosis.

KW - Fasciola hepatica

KW - Transmission

KW - Dairy

KW - Diagnostic

KW - ELISA

KW - Denmark

U2 - 10.1186/s13071-018-3248-z

DO - 10.1186/s13071-018-3248-z

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30594235

VL - 11

JO - Parasites & Vectors

JF - Parasites & Vectors

SN - 1756-3305

M1 - 674

ER -

ID: 211853122