Bovine brucellosis is an exceptionally contagious, zoonotic and financially significant bacterial disease. The point of this paper was to review accessible logical information on serological tests for the analysis of bovine brucellosis and look at their test execution in view of sensitivity (Se) and specificity (Sp) upsides of measures. The infection was portrayed by early abortion, placentitis, epididymitis, and orchitis.
The clinical image of brucellosis is not pathognomonic, and the clinical history of the patient, especially the event of fetal removal, is of central symptomatic significance. Although definitive diagnosis of bovine brucellosis is finished by disconnection and distinguishing proof of the causative agents, serological tests are normally the most preferred. The host defense mechanism against Brucella can practically be partitioned into innate or nonspecific and adaptive or specific immunity. The pathogenic brucella living being has fostered a battery of instruments to sidestep or potentially regulate both innate and adaptive immune reactions in their host.
Serological tests depend on the way that Brucella abortus, similar to other smooth Brucella, have distinctive O-polysaccharides that incite a humoral reaction with an underlying production of IgM trailed by IgG1 and IgG2/IgA. Serological techniques accessible for the analysis of bovine brucellosis incorporate the screening serological test (Milk ring test, Rose Bengal Test (RBT) and Buffered plate agglutination test (BPAT)) and corroborative serological test, which are the complement fixation test (CFT), serum agglutination test (SAT), 2-mercaptoethanol test (2ME), indirect-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (iELISA), and, more recently, competitive ELISA (cELISA) and Brucella fluorescent polarization assay (FPA). For quite a long time, there was no single serological test that is suitable in each and every epidemiological circumstance and 100% precise.
Inhalt
1. INTRODUCTION
2. HOST IMMUNE RESPONSES IN BRUCELLA INFECTION
2.1. Innate Immunity
2.1.1. Physical boundaries
2.1.2. Humoral parts
2.1.3. Cellular parts
2.2. Adaptive Immunity
2.2.1. Antibody-induced resistance (AMI)
2.2.2. Cell-mediated immunity (CMI)
3. SEROLOGICAL DIAGNOSTIC TESTS IN BOVINE BRUCELLOSIS
3.1. Screening Serological Tests
3.1.1. Rose-Bengal plate test (RBT)
3.1.2. Milk ring test (MRT)
3.1.3. Buffered plate agglutination test
3.2. Confirmatory serological tests
3.2.1. Complement fixation test
3.2.2. 2-Mercaptoethanol (2ME) test
3.2.3. Enzyme-connected immunosorbent assay (ELISA)
3.2.4. Serum agglutination test
3.2.5. Fluorescence polarization test
3.2.6. Brucellin hypersensitive skin test
3.2.7. Rivanol plate test
3.2.8. Antiglobulin or Coomb's test
3.2.9. Native hapten and poly B tests
4. TEST PERFORMANCE AND COST COMPARISON OF SEROLOGICAL TESTS
5. ENDS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
6. REFERENCES
- Quote paper
- Isayas Asefa (Author), Haben Fesseha (Author), 2022, Serological Diagnostic Methods. An Overview, Munich, GRIN Verlag, https://www.hausarbeiten.de/document/1192279