COXIELLA BURNETII INFECTION IN SHEEP AND GOATS: A PUBLIC RISK HEALTH, COLOMBIA

Objective. The aim of this study was to provide molecular evidence of C. burnetii in sheep and goats from some herds of Valledupar, Cesar, Colombia. Materials and methods. Fifteen herds of sheep and goats were chosen by convenience to investigate the infection by C. burnetii, during March and April...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Verónica Contreras
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asociación Colombiana de Infectología 2018-09-01
Series:Infectio
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistainfectio.org/index.php/infectio/article/view/734/769
id doaj-cb1998546fdd4e488ad5ae3cbbc62796
record_format Article
spelling doaj-cb1998546fdd4e488ad5ae3cbbc627962020-11-24T22:46:17ZengAsociación Colombiana de InfectologíaInfectio0123-93920123-93922018-09-0122417317710.22354/in.v22i4.734COXIELLA BURNETII INFECTION IN SHEEP AND GOATS: A PUBLIC RISK HEALTH, COLOMBIAVerónica Contreras0Universidad de CordobaObjective. The aim of this study was to provide molecular evidence of C. burnetii in sheep and goats from some herds of Valledupar, Cesar, Colombia. Materials and methods. Fifteen herds of sheep and goats were chosen by convenience to investigate the infection by C. burnetii, during March and April of 2013. 328 female goats and 66 sheep from 15 herds were included in this study. Milk from ewes and vaginal mucus samples from goats were analyzed by Polymerase Chain Reaction for DNA detection of transposase gene (IS1111) of C. burnetii. Results. DNA of C. burnetii in 6% (4/66) of sheep’s milk and 0.6% (2/328) vaginal mucus from goats was found. 13% (2/15) of the herds had at least one infected animal. Discussion. Our findings suggest the circulation of C. burnetii in sheep and goats from some herds of Valledupar, Colombia, and it highlights the possibility of occurrence of infections in humans and animals. Conclusions. The detection of C. burnetii in sheep milk could represent a public health risk factor for people who consuming raw milk, cheeses or people associated to agriculture and livestock handling. Further studies are necessary to evaluate other routes such as tick’s bite, feces, milk from goats and vaginal mucus from sheep of this region of Colombia. http://revistainfectio.org/index.php/infectio/article/view/734/769Q fevercoxiellacolombiasheep
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Verónica Contreras
spellingShingle Verónica Contreras
COXIELLA BURNETII INFECTION IN SHEEP AND GOATS: A PUBLIC RISK HEALTH, COLOMBIA
Infectio
Q fever
coxiella
colombia
sheep
author_facet Verónica Contreras
author_sort Verónica Contreras
title COXIELLA BURNETII INFECTION IN SHEEP AND GOATS: A PUBLIC RISK HEALTH, COLOMBIA
title_short COXIELLA BURNETII INFECTION IN SHEEP AND GOATS: A PUBLIC RISK HEALTH, COLOMBIA
title_full COXIELLA BURNETII INFECTION IN SHEEP AND GOATS: A PUBLIC RISK HEALTH, COLOMBIA
title_fullStr COXIELLA BURNETII INFECTION IN SHEEP AND GOATS: A PUBLIC RISK HEALTH, COLOMBIA
title_full_unstemmed COXIELLA BURNETII INFECTION IN SHEEP AND GOATS: A PUBLIC RISK HEALTH, COLOMBIA
title_sort coxiella burnetii infection in sheep and goats: a public risk health, colombia
publisher Asociación Colombiana de Infectología
series Infectio
issn 0123-9392
0123-9392
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Objective. The aim of this study was to provide molecular evidence of C. burnetii in sheep and goats from some herds of Valledupar, Cesar, Colombia. Materials and methods. Fifteen herds of sheep and goats were chosen by convenience to investigate the infection by C. burnetii, during March and April of 2013. 328 female goats and 66 sheep from 15 herds were included in this study. Milk from ewes and vaginal mucus samples from goats were analyzed by Polymerase Chain Reaction for DNA detection of transposase gene (IS1111) of C. burnetii. Results. DNA of C. burnetii in 6% (4/66) of sheep’s milk and 0.6% (2/328) vaginal mucus from goats was found. 13% (2/15) of the herds had at least one infected animal. Discussion. Our findings suggest the circulation of C. burnetii in sheep and goats from some herds of Valledupar, Colombia, and it highlights the possibility of occurrence of infections in humans and animals. Conclusions. The detection of C. burnetii in sheep milk could represent a public health risk factor for people who consuming raw milk, cheeses or people associated to agriculture and livestock handling. Further studies are necessary to evaluate other routes such as tick’s bite, feces, milk from goats and vaginal mucus from sheep of this region of Colombia.
topic Q fever
coxiella
colombia
sheep
url http://revistainfectio.org/index.php/infectio/article/view/734/769
work_keys_str_mv AT veronicacontreras coxiellaburnetiiinfectioninsheepandgoatsapublicriskhealthcolombia
_version_ 1725685406563827712