Munroe F A, Dohoo I R, McNab W B, Spangler L
National Centre for Foreign Animal Disease, Canadian Food Inspection Agency, Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Prev Vet Med. 1999 Jul 20;41(2-3):119-33. doi: 10.1016/s0167-5877(99)00051-3.
Microorganisms of the genus Mycobacterium cause tuberculosis in many animal species including humans. Generally, Mycobacterium bovis (M. bovis) infects cattle and cervids, but it has the potential to infect virtually all species of mammals. This study examined and analysed the data from the nine outbreaks of tuberculosis in Canadian cattle and cervids from 1985 to 1994. For the purposes of this study, a positive herd was one with at least one culture-positive animal. A reactor herd had at least one animal which was positive or suspicious on a mid-cervical, comparative cervical, or gross or histopathologic test for tuberculosis. Herd classification was either reactor/positive or negative. Data for the study were collected from the outbreak records in the Regional or District offices of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. Logistic regression was used to study spread of tuberculosis between herds. Two risk factors were identified: increasing herd size; and, the reason why a herd was investigated as part of the outbreak. This latter factor was interpreted as a surrogate measure for the nature of contact between the study herd and other potentially infected herds in the outbreak. Increasing herd size was associated with an increased risk of being positive for tuberculosis with herds of 16-35, 36-80, and >80 animals having odds ratios of 2.9, 5.8, and 9.3, respectively, when compared to a herd size of <16 animals (p < 0.001). When compared to perimeter testing (i.e. testing herds within a specified radius of an infected herd), all other reasons for investigation had higher odds ratios (p < 0.001). These odds ratios were 57.8 for traceout herds (i.e. herds which had purchased animal(s) from a reactor/positive herd), 31.8 for herds with pasture or fence-line contact with a reactor/positive herd, and 14.9 for traceback herds (i.e. herds which had been a source of animals for reactor/positive herd(s)).
分枝杆菌属微生物可在包括人类在内的许多动物物种中引发结核病。一般来说,牛分枝杆菌(M. bovis)感染牛和鹿,但实际上它有感染几乎所有哺乳动物物种的可能性。本研究检查并分析了1985年至1994年加拿大牛和鹿群中九次结核病疫情的数据。就本研究而言,阳性牛群是指至少有一头培养阳性动物的牛群。反应牛群至少有一头动物在颈部中段、比较颈部、大体或组织病理学结核病检测中呈阳性或可疑。牛群分类为反应/阳性或阴性。该研究的数据收集自加拿大农业和农业食品部区域或地区办公室的疫情记录。采用逻辑回归研究结核病在牛群间的传播。确定了两个风险因素:牛群规模增加;以及,牛群作为疫情一部分接受调查的原因。后一个因素被解释为研究牛群与疫情中其他潜在感染牛群之间接触性质的替代指标。牛群规模增加与结核病呈阳性的风险增加相关,与规模小于16头动物的牛群相比,有16 - 35头、36 - 80头和超过80头动物的牛群的优势比分别为2.9、5.8和9.3(p < 0.001)。与周边检测(即在受感染牛群指定半径内检测牛群)相比,所有其他调查原因的优势比更高(p < 0.001)。这些优势比对于追踪牛群(即从反应/阳性牛群购买过动物的牛群)为57.8,对于与反应/阳性牛群有牧场或围栏接触的牛群为31.8,对于追溯牛群(即曾是反应/阳性牛群动物来源的牛群)为14.9。