Mastitis on selected farms in Wakiso district, Uganda: Burden, pathogens and predictors of infectivity of antimicrobial resistant bacteria in dairy herds

Author:

Kakooza Steven12,Mutebi Francis13,Ssajjakambwe Paul3,Wampande Eddie14,Nabatta Esther14,Atuheire Collins3,Tsuchida Sayaka5,Okubo Torahiko6,Ushida Kazunari5ORCID,Kaneene John Baligwamunsi7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Central Diagnostic Laboratory, College of Veterinary Medicine, Animal Resources and Biosecurity Makerere University Kampala Uganda

2. Novel Minds Science Plexus Kampala Uganda

3. College of Veterinary Medicine, Animal Resources and Biosecurity Makerere University Kampala Uganda

4. Infectious Diseases Institute, College of Health Sciences Makerere University Kampala Uganda

5. Academy of Emerging Sciences Chubu University Kasugai Aichi Japan

6. Department of Medical Laboratory Science, Faculty of Health Sciences Hokkaido University Graduate School of Health Sciences Sapporo Hokkaido Japan

7. Center for Comparative Epidemiology Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundMastitis and associated antimicrobial resistance (AMR) are major challenges to the dairy industry worldwide.ObjectiveThis study aimed to expose the mastitis burden, causative bacteria and drivers for mastitis‐causing multi‐drug‐resistant (MDR) Staphylococci infectivity in cows on dairy farms in Wakiso district, Uganda.MethodsOn 22 farms, practices were documented using questionnaires, and 175 cows were screened by the California mastitis test. Composite milk samples from the positive reactors were submitted to the laboratory for bacterial culture testing. Antimicrobial sensitivity testing by the Kirby Bauer disc diffusion method was done only on Staphylococci with a panel of 10 antimicrobials of clinical relevance.ResultsMastitis was detected in 80.6% (n = 141) of the 175 sampled cows, of which sub‐clinical mastitis (76.0%: n = 133) was predominant. The Chi‐squared analysis hypothesized that cow age (p = 0.017), sub‐county (p = 0.013), parity (p < 0.0001), sex of farm owner (p = 0.003), farm duration in dairy production (p = 0.048) and the use of milking salve (p = 0.006) were associated with mastitis. Coagulase‐negative Staphylococci were the most prevalent (71.4%; n = 95), followed by Staphylococcus aureus (30.1%, n = 40). Staphylococci (76.3%; n = 135) were majorly resistant to penicillin and tetracycline. Only one isolate was phenotyped as a methicillin‐resistant Staphylococcus specie (MRSS). The prevalences of MDR strains at cow and isolate level were 6.3% and 8.3%. The major MDR phenotype identified was penicillin–tetracycline–trimethoprim‐sulphamethoxazole. The isolate detected as an MRSS exhibited the broadest MDR pattern. Cow parity was identified as a predictor of infectivity of mastitis‐causing MDR Staphylococci in dairy herds.ConclusionThe high prevalence of mastitis and associated pathogen AMR found exposes possibilities of economic losses for the dairy sector warranting the need for farmer sensitization on the institution of proper mastitis prevention and control programs, with emphasis on milking hygiene practices and routine disease monitoring.

Funder

Michigan State University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Veterinary

Reference52 articles.

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