Abstract

The delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) test was used to diagnose brucellosis in two cows experimentally induced with brucellosis, and 176 dairy cows from a farm suspected of brucellosis. DTH test results were compared with results of the milk ring test, the serum agglutination test, the complement fixation test and the Coombs test. Cows positive in the DTH test and in one of the other tests were examined bacteriologically. In experimentally infected animals the DTH test was positive 10 days after infection, 1–4 weeks before serologic tests indicated brucellosis. Although the DTH test was positive during the whole experiment, on the one occasion when serologic titres were high, it was negative. Of the 176 dairy cows, 45 were positive in one or more serologic tests. In twelve cows (29%) the diagnosis was inconclusive because they were positive in only one of the serologic tests. In these cases the DTH test confirmed the infection. Three cows with high serologic response tested negative in the DTH test. B. abortus was isolated from 13 of 15 cows examined. We conclude that when serologic results are ambiguous, the DTH test is a useful additional technique for diagnosing brucellosis.

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