Volume 125, April 2015, Pages 146–153
Highlights
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- Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis infection in sheep leads to significant effects on live weight and serum albumin.
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- These effects were detectable up to 2 years before the development of clinical signs.
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- Mean differences for live weight were highly significant for animals with severe disease.
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- These results confirm that significant loss in production occurs well before clinical signs are detected.
Abstract
Johne's disease (JD) is a chronic enteropathy caused by Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis
(MAP). The financial impacts of mortalities due to ovine JD (OJD) in
Australia are recognised; however, production losses in the subclinical
and clinical stages of infection have not been considered. A
longitudinal field investigation over 3 years was conducted in 83
MAP-infected sheep within a flock with 14% prevalence of infection, to
describe the changes in serum biochemistry, wool growth and live weight
associated with MAP. Of the 22 biochemical parameters analysed, only
serum albumin levels were consistently and significantly associated
(reduced) with the development of Johne's disease (P < 0.05).
Live weights were significantly less (up to 5 kg) in sheep with severe
histological lesions at 3 years of age compared to controls (P < 0.05).
In the subset of sheep that died from OJD during the trial, there were
severe effects on live weight measured in the 6–12 months prior to
death, although early changes in live weight were only apparent when
objectively measured and compared to non-affected cohorts. Wool quality
and growth were not consistently related to changes in lesion severity
or development of JD. Even under exposure conditions leading to
relatively mild within flock prevalence, the negative effects of OJD on
live weight were measurable and economically significant; greater
impacts would be expected at younger ages in flocks with higher
prevalence.
Keywords
- Paratuberculosis;
- Subclinical disease;
- Ovine;
- Johne's disease;
- Serum biochemistry
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