Prevalence and risk factors of Salmonella in commercial poultry farms in Nigeria

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Prevalence and risk factors of Salmonella in commercial poultry farms in Nigeria. / Jibril, Abdurrahman Hassan; Okeke, Iruka N.; Dalsgaard, Anders; Kudirkiene, Egle; Akinlabi, Olabisi Comfort; Bello, Muhammad Bashir; Olsen, John Elmerdahl.

I: PLoS ONE, Bind 15, Nr. 9, e0238190, 2020, s. 17.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Jibril, AH, Okeke, IN, Dalsgaard, A, Kudirkiene, E, Akinlabi, OC, Bello, MB & Olsen, JE 2020, 'Prevalence and risk factors of Salmonella in commercial poultry farms in Nigeria', PLoS ONE, bind 15, nr. 9, e0238190, s. 17. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238190

APA

Jibril, A. H., Okeke, I. N., Dalsgaard, A., Kudirkiene, E., Akinlabi, O. C., Bello, M. B., & Olsen, J. E. (2020). Prevalence and risk factors of Salmonella in commercial poultry farms in Nigeria. PLoS ONE, 15(9), 17. [e0238190]. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238190

Vancouver

Jibril AH, Okeke IN, Dalsgaard A, Kudirkiene E, Akinlabi OC, Bello MB o.a. Prevalence and risk factors of Salmonella in commercial poultry farms in Nigeria. PLoS ONE. 2020;15(9):17. e0238190. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238190

Author

Jibril, Abdurrahman Hassan ; Okeke, Iruka N. ; Dalsgaard, Anders ; Kudirkiene, Egle ; Akinlabi, Olabisi Comfort ; Bello, Muhammad Bashir ; Olsen, John Elmerdahl. / Prevalence and risk factors of Salmonella in commercial poultry farms in Nigeria. I: PLoS ONE. 2020 ; Bind 15, Nr. 9. s. 17.

Bibtex

@article{a0e81929b9644c31ab2c35005914cc24,
title = "Prevalence and risk factors of Salmonella in commercial poultry farms in Nigeria",
abstract = "Salmonella is an important human pathogen and poultry products constitute an important source of human infections. This study investigated prevalence; identified serotypes based on whole genome sequence, described spatial distribution of Salmonella serotypes and predicted risk factors that could influence the prevalence of Salmonella infection in commercial poultry farms in Nigeria. A cross sectional approach was employed to collect 558 pooled shoe socks and dust samples from 165 commercial poultry farms in North West Nigeria. On-farm visitation questionnaires were administered to obtain information on farm management practices in order to assess risk factors for Salmonella prevalence. Salmonella was identified by culture, biotyping, serology and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). PCR confirmed isolates were paired-end Illumina- sequenced. Following de novo genome assembly, draft genomes were used to obtain serotypes by SeqSero2 and SISTR pipeline and sequence types by SISTR and Enterobase. Risk factor analysis was performed using the logit model. A farm prevalence of 47.9% (CI95 [40.3-55.5]) for Salmonella was observed, with a sample level prevalence of 15.9% (CI95 [12.9-18.9]). Twenty-three different serotypes were identified, with S. Kentucky and S. Isangi as the most prevalent (32.9% and 11%). Serotypes showed some geographic variation. Salmonella detection was strongly associated with disposal of poultry waste and with presence of other livestock on the farm. Salmonella was commonly detected on commercial poultry farms in North West Nigeria and S. Kentucky was found to be ubiquitous in the farms.",
author = "Jibril, {Abdurrahman Hassan} and Okeke, {Iruka N.} and Anders Dalsgaard and Egle Kudirkiene and Akinlabi, {Olabisi Comfort} and Bello, {Muhammad Bashir} and Olsen, {John Elmerdahl}",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0238190",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "17",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Prevalence and risk factors of Salmonella in commercial poultry farms in Nigeria

AU - Jibril, Abdurrahman Hassan

AU - Okeke, Iruka N.

AU - Dalsgaard, Anders

AU - Kudirkiene, Egle

AU - Akinlabi, Olabisi Comfort

AU - Bello, Muhammad Bashir

AU - Olsen, John Elmerdahl

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Salmonella is an important human pathogen and poultry products constitute an important source of human infections. This study investigated prevalence; identified serotypes based on whole genome sequence, described spatial distribution of Salmonella serotypes and predicted risk factors that could influence the prevalence of Salmonella infection in commercial poultry farms in Nigeria. A cross sectional approach was employed to collect 558 pooled shoe socks and dust samples from 165 commercial poultry farms in North West Nigeria. On-farm visitation questionnaires were administered to obtain information on farm management practices in order to assess risk factors for Salmonella prevalence. Salmonella was identified by culture, biotyping, serology and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). PCR confirmed isolates were paired-end Illumina- sequenced. Following de novo genome assembly, draft genomes were used to obtain serotypes by SeqSero2 and SISTR pipeline and sequence types by SISTR and Enterobase. Risk factor analysis was performed using the logit model. A farm prevalence of 47.9% (CI95 [40.3-55.5]) for Salmonella was observed, with a sample level prevalence of 15.9% (CI95 [12.9-18.9]). Twenty-three different serotypes were identified, with S. Kentucky and S. Isangi as the most prevalent (32.9% and 11%). Serotypes showed some geographic variation. Salmonella detection was strongly associated with disposal of poultry waste and with presence of other livestock on the farm. Salmonella was commonly detected on commercial poultry farms in North West Nigeria and S. Kentucky was found to be ubiquitous in the farms.

AB - Salmonella is an important human pathogen and poultry products constitute an important source of human infections. This study investigated prevalence; identified serotypes based on whole genome sequence, described spatial distribution of Salmonella serotypes and predicted risk factors that could influence the prevalence of Salmonella infection in commercial poultry farms in Nigeria. A cross sectional approach was employed to collect 558 pooled shoe socks and dust samples from 165 commercial poultry farms in North West Nigeria. On-farm visitation questionnaires were administered to obtain information on farm management practices in order to assess risk factors for Salmonella prevalence. Salmonella was identified by culture, biotyping, serology and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). PCR confirmed isolates were paired-end Illumina- sequenced. Following de novo genome assembly, draft genomes were used to obtain serotypes by SeqSero2 and SISTR pipeline and sequence types by SISTR and Enterobase. Risk factor analysis was performed using the logit model. A farm prevalence of 47.9% (CI95 [40.3-55.5]) for Salmonella was observed, with a sample level prevalence of 15.9% (CI95 [12.9-18.9]). Twenty-three different serotypes were identified, with S. Kentucky and S. Isangi as the most prevalent (32.9% and 11%). Serotypes showed some geographic variation. Salmonella detection was strongly associated with disposal of poultry waste and with presence of other livestock on the farm. Salmonella was commonly detected on commercial poultry farms in North West Nigeria and S. Kentucky was found to be ubiquitous in the farms.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0238190

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0238190

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32966297

AN - SCOPUS:85091543314

VL - 15

SP - 17

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 9

M1 - e0238190

ER -

ID: 249426704