Abstract
Background
Coxiella burnetii is a bacterial pathogen that can cause abortion and reproductive disease in livestock. In the UK, C. burnetii affects many dairy cattle herds, although the infection dynamics are poorly understood. Our study was performed to investigate infection patterns within a dairy cattle herd in Scotland that had experienced stillbirths attributed to C. burnetii infection.Methods
Different management groups within the affected herd were sampled. Serology and qPCR testing of vaginal swabs were performed to investigate infection status. Regression analyses were performed to evaluate associations between diagnostic results and variables describing calving status and farm site.Results
C. burnetii infection was detected in all management groups within the herd. The highest seroprevalence was detected in pre-calving heifers (78.6%) and the highest bacterial loads were detected in post-calving animals.Limitations
These data represent a sample from one farm and testing for a single pathogen shedding route, which limits the generalizability of our findings.Conclusions
C. burnetii infection is widespread within this affected herd. Marked differences were observed between the management groups, which may be explained by variables including pregnancy stage or environmental factors. Further work is needed to understand the implications of these results for the wider UK dairy sector.Citations & impact
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Funding
Funders who supported this work.
Academy of Medical Sciences (1)
Grant ID: SGL026∖1028
publications
Academy of Medical Sciences Starter Grant for Clinical Lecturers (1)
Grant ID: SGL026/1028
publications
Association of Physicians of Great Britain and Ireland
British Heart Foundation, Versus Arthritis, Diabetes UK
British Thoracic Society
Hannah Dairy Research Foundation
Hannah Dairy Research Foundation Small Grant (1)
Grant ID: HA0514-0081
publications

