Berk Zoe, Bishop Stephen C, Forbes Andrew B, Kyriazakis Ilias
School of Agriculture Food and Rural Development, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU, UK.
The Roslin Institute and Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh, Midlothian, EH25 9RG, Scotland, UK.
Vet Parasitol. 2016 Aug 15;226:198-209. doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2016.05.001. Epub 2016 May 7.
A dynamic, deterministic model was developed to investigate the consequences of parasitism with Ostertagia ostertagi, the most prevalent and economically important gastrointestinal parasite of cattle in temperate regions. Interactions between host and parasite were considered to predict the level of parasitism and performance of an infected calf. Key model inputs included calf intrinsic growth rate, feed quality and mode and level of infection. The effects of these varied inputs were simulated on a daily basis for key parasitological (worm burden, total egg output and faecal egg count) and performance outputs (feed intake and bodyweight) over a 6 month grazing period. Data from published literature were used to parameterise the model and its sensitivity was tested for uncertain parameters by a Latin hypercube sensitivity design. For the latter each parameter tested was subject to a 20% coefficient of variation. The model parasitological outputs were most sensitive to the immune rate parameters that affected overall worm burdens. The model predicted the expected larger worm burdens along with disproportionately greater body weight losses with increasing daily infection levels. The model was validated against published literature using graphical and statistical comparisons. Its predictions were quantitatively consistent with the parasitological outputs of published experiments in which calves were subjected to different infection levels. The consequences of model weaknesses are discussed and point towards model improvements. Future work should focus on developing a stochastic model to account for calf variation in performance and immune response; this will ultimately be used to test the effectiveness of different parasite control strategies in naturally infected calf populations.
开发了一个动态确定性模型,以研究感染奥斯特他线虫(Ostertagia ostertagi)的后果,奥斯特他线虫是温带地区牛最常见且在经济上最重要的胃肠道寄生虫。考虑宿主与寄生虫之间的相互作用,以预测感染小牛的寄生虫感染水平和生长性能。模型的关键输入包括小牛的内在生长速率、饲料质量以及感染方式和水平。在为期6个月的放牧期内,每天模拟这些不同输入对关键寄生虫学指标(虫负荷、总产卵量和粪便虫卵计数)和生长性能指标(采食量和体重)的影响。利用已发表文献中的数据对模型进行参数化,并通过拉丁超立方敏感性设计对不确定参数进行敏感性测试。对于后者,每个测试参数的变异系数为20%。模型的寄生虫学输出对影响总体虫负荷的免疫速率参数最为敏感。该模型预测,随着每日感染水平的增加,预期虫负荷会更大,同时体重损失也会不成比例地增加。通过图形和统计比较,对照已发表文献对该模型进行了验证。其预测结果在数量上与已发表实验中不同感染水平小牛的寄生虫学输出一致。讨论了模型弱点的后果,并指出了模型改进的方向。未来的工作应侧重于开发一个随机模型,以考虑小牛在生长性能和免疫反应方面的差异;这最终将用于测试不同寄生虫控制策略在自然感染小牛群体中的有效性。