Comparative evaluation of three PCR base diagnostic assays for the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes in cattle blood

Currently, several PCR based diagnostic assays have been developed to improve the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes. These tests include use of species specific primers, single and nested PCRs' based on primers amplifying the Internal Transcribed Spacer (ITS) regions of ribosomal DNA. This study...

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Main Authors: Thumbi, Samuel M., McOdimba, F.A., Mosi, R.O., Jung'a, J.O.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/1242
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author Thumbi, Samuel M.
McOdimba, F.A.
Mosi, R.O.
Jung'a, J.O.
author_browse Jung'a, J.O.
McOdimba, F.A.
Mosi, R.O.
Thumbi, Samuel M.
author_facet Thumbi, Samuel M.
McOdimba, F.A.
Mosi, R.O.
Jung'a, J.O.
author_sort Thumbi, Samuel M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Currently, several PCR based diagnostic assays have been developed to improve the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes. These tests include use of species specific primers, single and nested PCRs' based on primers amplifying the Internal Transcribed Spacer (ITS) regions of ribosomal DNA. This study compares three PCR based diagnostic assays and assesses the agreement of these three asaays by screening 103 cattle blood samples randomly collected from trypanosome endemic areas in western Kenya. The nested ITS based PCR, the single ITS based PCR and the species specific based PCR detected 28.1%, 26.2% and 10.7% of the samples respectively as positive for trypanosome infection. Nested ITS and single ITS PCRs' picked 3.8% and 1.9% as mixed infections respectively. Cohen kappa statistic used to compare agreements beyond chance between the assays showed highest degree of agreement (0.6) between the two ITS based tests, and the lowest (0.2) between the nested PCR test and the species specific PCR. The single ITS and nested ITS based diagnostic assays detected higher numbers of positive cases, and reduced the number of PCR reactions per sample to one and two respectively, compared to the five PCR reactions carried out using the species specific primers. This significantly reduced the labour, time and the cost of carrying out PCR tests, indicating the superiority of the ITS multi-species detection techniques. Reliable epidemiological studies are a prerequisite to designing effective tsetse and trypanosomiasis control programs. The present study established the suitability of using ITS based PCR assays for large-scale epidemiological studies.
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spelling CGSpace12422024-05-01T08:18:22Z Comparative evaluation of three PCR base diagnostic assays for the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes in cattle blood Thumbi, Samuel M. McOdimba, F.A. Mosi, R.O. Jung'a, J.O. animal diseases disease control Currently, several PCR based diagnostic assays have been developed to improve the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes. These tests include use of species specific primers, single and nested PCRs' based on primers amplifying the Internal Transcribed Spacer (ITS) regions of ribosomal DNA. This study compares three PCR based diagnostic assays and assesses the agreement of these three asaays by screening 103 cattle blood samples randomly collected from trypanosome endemic areas in western Kenya. The nested ITS based PCR, the single ITS based PCR and the species specific based PCR detected 28.1%, 26.2% and 10.7% of the samples respectively as positive for trypanosome infection. Nested ITS and single ITS PCRs' picked 3.8% and 1.9% as mixed infections respectively. Cohen kappa statistic used to compare agreements beyond chance between the assays showed highest degree of agreement (0.6) between the two ITS based tests, and the lowest (0.2) between the nested PCR test and the species specific PCR. The single ITS and nested ITS based diagnostic assays detected higher numbers of positive cases, and reduced the number of PCR reactions per sample to one and two respectively, compared to the five PCR reactions carried out using the species specific primers. This significantly reduced the labour, time and the cost of carrying out PCR tests, indicating the superiority of the ITS multi-species detection techniques. Reliable epidemiological studies are a prerequisite to designing effective tsetse and trypanosomiasis control programs. The present study established the suitability of using ITS based PCR assays for large-scale epidemiological studies. 2008-12 2010-04-13T21:30:00Z 2010-04-13T21:30:00Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/1242 en Open Access Springer Thumbi, S.M.; McOdimba, F.A.; Mosi, R.O.; Jung'a, J.O. 2008. Comparative evaluation of three PCR based diagnostic assays for the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes in cattle blood. Parasites & Vectors 1:46.
spellingShingle animal diseases
disease control
Thumbi, Samuel M.
McOdimba, F.A.
Mosi, R.O.
Jung'a, J.O.
Comparative evaluation of three PCR base diagnostic assays for the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes in cattle blood
title Comparative evaluation of three PCR base diagnostic assays for the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes in cattle blood
title_full Comparative evaluation of three PCR base diagnostic assays for the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes in cattle blood
title_fullStr Comparative evaluation of three PCR base diagnostic assays for the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes in cattle blood
title_full_unstemmed Comparative evaluation of three PCR base diagnostic assays for the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes in cattle blood
title_short Comparative evaluation of three PCR base diagnostic assays for the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes in cattle blood
title_sort comparative evaluation of three pcr base diagnostic assays for the detection of pathogenic trypanosomes in cattle blood
topic animal diseases
disease control
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/1242
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