Comparison of detection methods for Salmonella enterica shedding among reptilian patients at a veterinary teaching hospital

Author:

Fagre Anna C.123,Pabilonia Kristy L.123ORCID,Johnston Matthew S.123,Morley Paul S.123,Burgess Brandy A.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO (Fagre, Pabilonia, Johnston, Morley, Burgess)

2. College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX (Morley)

3. College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Georgia, Athens, GA (Burgess)

Abstract

In the United States, ~1.4 million sporadic human Salmonella enterica infections occur annually, with an estimated 6% attributable to reptile exposure. Detection of Salmonella in reptiles can be challenging given the limitations among detection methods. We evaluated sampling and detection methods for S. enterica in a cross-sectional study of reptilian patients ( n = 45) over the course of 13 mo. Two sampling methods (cloacal swabs, electrostatic cloth body-feet samples) and 3 detection methods (enriched culture, lateral flow immunoassay [LFI], real-time PCR) were compared using McNemar and Fisher exact tests. Results varied by species, sample type, and detection method. In total, 14 of 45 (33%) patients were positive by culture, 10 of 45 (22%), and/or 13 of 45 (29%) by rtPCR. Among rtPCR-positive results, cloacal swabs (12 of 45 [27%]) resulted in a higher detection than body-feet wipes (4 of 45 [9%]; p = 0.01). Among culture-positive results, shedding was most commonly detected after additional incubation at room temperature when testing cloacal swabs (9 of 45 [20%]). However, there was significant disagreement between sampling methods (cloacal vs. body-feet; p = 0.03). No samples were positive by LFI. In general, cloacal swabs yielded the highest test-positive rates, irrespective of testing method. Our study highlights the importance of using detection methods optimized for the sample being tested.

Funder

college of veterinary medicine and biomedical sciences, colorado state university

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Veterinary

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