Abstract

Mycobacterium bovis (M. bovis) has an exceptionally wide host range including sheep. Information on tuberculosis (TB) in sheep is scarce, and there appears to be conflicting opinions about the relative susceptibility of sheep to infection. In Ethiopia, there was no single previous report on tuberculosis in sheep, though mixed farming of cattle and sheep is a common practice. In this study, following the observation of TB-like lesions on sheep died from sheep flock kept in contact with cattle herd, further investigation was conducted on the flock to assess the magnitude of the infection and identify and characterize the causative M. bovis strain. An outbreak investigation was carried out on 26 eligible sheep out of 33 sheep found on the farm. Comparative intradermal tuberculin (CIDT) test, postmortem examination, Mycobacterium culturing, and spoligotyping were the techniques used in the study. The prevalence of TB in the tested sheep was 15% (4/26). All the sheep that were positive to CIDT had gross lesions suggestive of TB. Three of the positive sheep had extensive and multiple lesions. M. bovis was isolated from all four sheep and the strain was identified as spoligotype SBO134. The in-contact dairy cows were screened for TB and 98% (45/46) of the cows tested positive to CIDT. Furthermore, the same strain, SB0134, was also isolated from the two in-contact cows. The isolation of a matching genotype (SB0134) of M. bovis from both species sharing a known epidemiologic link strongly suggests that the sheep flock might have acquired the pathogen from the dairy cows. This warrants strict physical separation of the sheep flock from the cattle herd to prevent such interspecies transmission of M. bovis.

Highlights

  • M. bovis causes tuberculosis (TB) primarily in cattle, it can infect a wide range of animal species as well as human beings

  • In all the positive sheep, the differential increase in skin thickness at bovine purified protein derivatives (PPDs) injection site was greater than 12 mm, suggesting a severe delayed hypersensitivity reaction (Figure 1)

  • The present study reports the first confirmed cases of a TB in sheep flock kept in the same premise with a cattle herd with a known history of tuberculosis in Ethiopia

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Summary

Introduction

M. bovis causes tuberculosis (TB) primarily in cattle, it can infect a wide range of animal species as well as human beings. In Ethiopia, the endemic nature of TB in cattle has long been reported [4] and is one of the countries where TB is widespread in both human and cattle populations [5,6,7]. More recent reports suggest that the animal level prevalence of bovine TB in Ethiopia ranges from 3.4 % to 50% in different production systems [8,9,10,11]. Free movement of livestock from one region to another and from farm to farm is common. This practice facilitates inter- and intraspecies transmission of M. bovis. Mixing of cattle and sheep increases the risk of transmission of M. bovis from cattle to sheep [9]

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