Cryptosporidiosis in calves
dc.contributor.advisor
Morrison, Liam
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Innes, Elizabeth
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Katzer, Frank
en
dc.contributor.author
Shaw, Hannah Jade
en
dc.date.accessioned
2019-07-23T14:55:48Z
dc.date.available
2019-07-23T14:55:48Z
dc.date.issued
2019-06-29
dc.description.abstract
Cryptosporidiosis is a widespread zoonotic parasitic disease affecting
livestock all over the world. Despite its prevalence, there is very little
evidence about transmission routes to young calves, and how it could
affect them long-term. Many commonly used disinfectants on farm are
unable to inactivate Cryptosporidium oocysts, and some commercially
available disinfectants, which claim to work, do not appear to have
sufficient evidence available to the research and farming community.
This work shows multiple commercial disinfectants which have been
directly compared against each other for their efficacy against
Cryptosporidium oocysts.
The idea that transmission could occur from adult cattle via direct
contamination of calf pens with faecal material has been disputed in
scientific literature. Older research suggests that adult cattle are not
infected with the same species that the calves have, however more
recent research with new oocyst concentration techniques has found this
not to be the case. It is essential therefore that the genotypes of
Cryptosporidium are determined to see if adult cattle pose a risk to
their calves. Genotyping using microsatellite analysis gives a more in-depth
look at the type of C. parvum present. The aim was, therefore, to
determine the risk that adult cattle pose to their calves with regard to
C. parvum oocyst transmission on both a dairy and a beef farm in
Scotland. Using these methods, it was discovered that adult dairy cattle
are unlikely to play a major role in the transmission of C. parvum to
their calves. Most of the adult cattle on the dairy farm were
predominantly shedding C. parvum however calves on the same farm
presented with different multilocus genotype. On the beef farm,
however, many of the adult cattle did share the same multilocus
genotype as their calves, and so pose more of a risk for oocyst
transmission to their calves.
The species and genotypes of Cryptosporidium present in Scottish
wildlife has very few published studies, therefore the aim was to
determine the prevalence of C. parvum in samples from rabbits and
pheasants in Scotland. Rabbit faecal samples collected from 18 farms
from across Scotland revealed C. parvum to be the most prevalent
species; an unusual discovery as it was previosuly believed that C.
cuniculus was the most prevalent species in wild rabbits. Despite this the
DNA was very difficult to genotype which may indicate that the oocyst
load in the faeces of rabbits was small, or that the PCR may have been
affected by inhibition. If there is little DNA present, rabbits are unlikely
to pose a major threat to calves with regard to C. parvum oocyst
transmission. The pheasants also presented with C. parvum as the most
prevalent species, although very few shared the same genotype that was
present in the calves at the pheasant samples location. Very few oocysts
are required to cause cryptosporidiosis in a calf, so even if co-located
wildlife do not appear to be shedding high numbers of oocysts, there is
still a small risk of transmission present.
Young calves affected with cryptosporidiosis tend to make a full
recovery under the right management, and the clinical signs clear up
within a couple of weeks. It is not known whether or not there is a long-term
effect on the calves ability to gain weight following infection with
the parasite. Therefore the aim was to compare calves with different
levels of clinical cryptosporidiosis to calves with no signs of clinical
disease and weigh these animals periodically until they went to market
at 6 months of age. It was found that calves with severe disease gained
significantly less weight than those with no clinical disease and even
animals with mild cryptosporidiosis suffered reduced weight gain over 6
months. This result demonstrates the economic cost that the parasite
could have to the farming community on a long-term basis.
Commonly used disinfectants are typically ineffective against
Cryptosporidium oocysts, and those that are on the market have very
little evidence to support their efficacy. Therefore, seven commercial
disinfectants were tested for their efficacy to inactivate
Cryptosporidium oocysts based on excystation rate and sporozoite to
shell ratio. It was identified that hydrogen peroxide and hydrogen
peroxide-based disinfectants are the most successful at inactivating
oocysts, but only when the disinfectant is freshly prepared. Testing the
efficacy of disinfectants once the disinfectant had been made up for 7
days showed that the best performing disinfectant with regard to having
the least degradation over seven days was KENOTMCOX. As many farmers
are unlikely to make disinfectant up fresh every time it is used, it is
useful to know that despite the high efficacy of some products, time
since the product was prepared significantly reduces this. It was also
found that pens contaminated with faecal material are likely to reduce
the efficacy of hydrogen peroxide-based disinfectants and so it is
important to clean pens before disinfection.
Therefore, this PhD has addressed the knowledge gaps in the literature
regarding the role of adult cattle, rabbits and pheasants in the
transmission of C. parvum to calves. Neither one poses a major risk due
to the low oocyst output and mixed C. parvum genotypes present. It is
more likely therefore that calves maintain infection through widespread
environmental contamination caused by other infected calves. This work
has shown how infection with C. parvum in the first few weeks of life
has a significant effect on the weight gain achieved over a 6-month
period and so cryptosporidiosis has a significant effect on livestock
production and on the profitability of the farm business. The efficacy of
commercial disinfectants has provided the advice that disinfectants
should be made up fresh and used on an area that has already been
cleaned of faecal material in order to inactivate as many of the oocysts
as possible.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/35834
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Wells, B., Shaw, H., Hotchkiss, E., Gilray, J., Ayton, R., Green, J., Innes, E. (2015). Prevalence, species identification and genotyping Cryptosporidium from livestock and deer in a catchment in the Cairngorms with a history of a contaminated public water supply. Parasite and Vectors, 8, 66. doi:10.1186/s13071-015-0684-x
en
dc.subject
cryptosporidiosis
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dc.subject
Cryptosporidium
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dc.subject
transmission
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dc.subject
C. parvum
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dc.subject
calf
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dc.subject
disinfectant
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dc.subject
Hydrogen peroxide
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dc.title
Cryptosporidiosis in calves
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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