Abstract
Cryptosporidium parvum infections of domestic animals
can have a considerable economic
impact and as oocysts are voided in the faeces of infected hosts,
environmental contamination
with agricultural waste has also become a matter of concern. Since only
viable oocysts are
potentially infectious, the numbers of oocysts excreted during infection
can have important
implications for both veterinary and public health. During the course of
infection in
experimentally infected lambs, oocyst viability was assessed by a fluorogenic
vital dyes assay
and by a maximized in vitro excystation assay. The excreted
oocyst populations contained a
higher proportion of viable oocysts 5–11 days post infection (d.p.i.)
than later in the infection.
Oocyst viability declined consistently 11–15 d.p.i. and coincided
with periods when peaks in
serum and intestinal anti-Cryptosporidium antibodies have been
reported to occur. Infected
lambs excreted a mean of 4·8 (standard error
[S.E.]±0·4)×109
oocysts per g of faeces, of which
half were non-viable and therefore of no significance for disease transmission.
This study demonstrates that the numbers of viable oocysts excreted by infected
lambs is smaller than previously suspected.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
26 articles.
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