Back to Search
Start Over
High prevalence of bovine cysticercosis found during evaluation of different post-mortem detection techniques in Belgian slaughterhouses
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Bovine cysticercosis (BCC), caused by the helminth Taenia saginata, is currently diagnosed solely by official meat inspection (MI) based on macroscopic detection of viable cysticerci or typical lesions of degenerated larvae. MI has a known low sensitivity (16%), leading to a large proportion of infected cattle carcasses entering the human food chain and posing a risk to public health. Prevalence in Belgium based on MI results is estimated at around 0.22%. Due to the low sensitivity of MI, alternative techniques to detect BCC should be considered. This study evaluates MI, MI with additional incisions in the heart, specific antibody detection against excretory/secretory (E/S) in the Ab-ELISA and circulating antigens in the B158/B60 Ag-ELISA on 715 (101 MI-positive and 614 MI-negative) samples collected from carcasses at slaughterhouses in Belgium. Full dissection of the predilection sites was considered the reference test. During the study, mostly carcasses with (very) light infections were detected containing predominantly degenerated or calcified cysticerci and only few viable cysticerci. Dissection of the predilection sites detected 144 (23%) additional infections in the 614 MI-negative carcasses. When sequentially performing first the dissection of the predilection sites, followed by the Ag-ELISA and the Ab-ELISA, an additional 36% of MI-negative carcasses were found positive for BCC, resulting in a prevalence very much higher than the above mentioned 0.22%. The B158/B60 Ag-ELISA showed a sensitivity of 40% for the detection of carcasses containing viable cysticerci and a specificity of 100%, and detected 70 positive carcasses of which only 14 had been identified as positive during MI. If Ag-ELISA were implemented as a detection technique for BCC in the slaughterhouses, many infected carcasses would still not be detected due to the sensitivity of 40%. But as sensitivity increases with increasing number of cysticerci in the carcass, the infected carcasses passing inspection will be the ones containing only a few viable cysticerci and thus posing a smaller food safety problem. Ag-ELISA is preferred over the ES Ab-ELISA in this study, which had a sensitivity of 13.3% and a specificity of 91.7% in a population with overall low infection burdens.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
10078 Institute of Parasitology
Pathology
medicine.medical_specialty
Food Safety
3400 General Veterinary
030231 tropical medicine
Population
Antibodies, Helminth
2405 Parasitology
Cattle Diseases
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
610 Medicine & health
Sensitivity and Specificity
Serology
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
600 Technology
parasitic diseases
medicine
Animals
Helminths
education
education.field_of_study
High prevalence
General Veterinary
biology
Cysticercosis
Bovine cysticercosis
food and beverages
Taenia saginata
Cysticercus
General Medicine
030108 mycology & parasitology
medicine.disease
biology.organism_classification
Red Meat
Parasitology
Antigens, Helminth
Taenia
570 Life sciences
Cattle
Abattoirs
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b5dc9feee094122953ffa60458b12d98
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.5167/uzh-141207