Leptospirosis. I. Clinical investigation of the infection in dairy cattle in the Waikato district of New Zealand

Authors: Lewis SF, Cordes DO, Holland JTS, Carter ME, Townsend KG
Publication: New Zealand Veterinary Journal, Volume 30, Issue 8, pp 122-124, Aug 1982
Publisher: Taylor and Francis

Animal type: Cattle, Livestock, Production animal, Ruminant
Subject Terms: Bacterial, Biosecurity, Clinical pathology, Diagnostic procedures, Disease surveillance, Epidemiology, Zoonosis, Disease/defect, Infectious disease, Public health
Article class: Clinical Communication
Abstract: An investigation was made into the prevalence of leptospiral infection in cattle. An area 50 km radius was selected in a region where leptospirosis was reputedly common. Farmers volunteered 250 herds with 39 500 cows for testing and 7 500 animals were selected and sampled. Twenty-nine cows (0.4%) on 14 (5.6%) of the farms had leptospiruria at the first examination. Leptospirae were cultured from the urines of nine of these animals and all were Leptospira interrogans serovar hardjo. Serologically 12.5% of cows had titres of 1:200 or greater to hardjo and 3.5% titres of 1:200 or greater to pomona. In the Spring of 1977, there was evidence of clinical leptospirosis in calves associated with only one of the herds and no clinical leptospirosis in the 250 lactating herds, although leptospiral titres were found in 88% of them. This indicated that clinical disease was much less common than infection. We concluded that leptospirosis was of minor economic importance in dairy cattle, although it could be significant in individual herds, and a health hazard to farm workers.
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