A longitudinal study of risk factors for shedding of VTEC O157 by young cattle in herds with known E. coli O157 carriage

Epidemiology and Infection
R SmithG A Paiba

Abstract

A longitudinal study in England and Wales of two dairy, five beef-fattener and three beef-suckler herds was carried out to identify risk factors for young cattle excreting verocytotoxin-producing Escherichia coli O157 (VTEC O157). A total of 1383 cattle, selected into cohorts at 0-24 months were sampled between March 2000 and February 2001. Mixed-effects logistic regression was employed to identify significant associations between VTEC O157 isolation from rectal faecal samples and explanatory factors (P < 0·001 unless shown). The results revealed a positive association with feeding root crops and a negative association with animals fed silage, milk (P = 0·001) or grain (P = 0·027). Cattle in suckler herds (P = 0·001) and those changing group between sampling visits were identified as negatively associated with VTEC O157 presence. The recovery of VTEC O157 varied throughout the year. However, the winter period from December to February was a risk factor in the multivariable analysis. Cattle in pens were 4·7 times more likely to shed VTEC O157 than those group-housed or at pasture. VTEC O157 detected in pooled environmental faecal pats and biofilm of the water supply within a group's enclosure were positively associated with an a...Continue Reading

References

Nov 18, 1997·Epidemiology and Infection·P A ChapmanM A Harkin
May 29, 1999·Letters in Applied Microbiology·K N JordanP J McClure
Jul 2, 1999·Applied and Environmental Microbiology·C J HovdeC W Hunt
Apr 27, 2002·Applied and Environmental Microbiology·Luke J GraukeCarolyn J Hovde
Jun 29, 2004·Preventive Veterinary Medicine·J M SchoutenE A M Graat
Apr 9, 2005·Epidemiology and Infection·E ErikssonI Vågsholm
Jun 22, 2007·Preventive Veterinary Medicine·Johanne Ellis-IversenGiles A Paiba
Dec 13, 2007·Veterinary Research·Johanne Ellis-IversenAlasdair J C Cook
Jul 11, 2008·Preventive Veterinary Medicine·I M G A BerendsH J van Weering
May 5, 2009·Veterinary Microbiology·Mohamed A KarmaliJan M Sargeant
Jan 26, 2010·Research in Veterinary Science·R P SmithJ Ellis-Iversen

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Citations

Mar 24, 2017·FEMS Microbiology Letters·Richard A Stein, David E Katz

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Biofilm & Infectious Disease

Biofilm formation is a key virulence factor for a wide range of microorganisms that cause chronic infections.Here is the latest research on biofilm and infectious diseases.