A field study evaluation of Petrifilm™ plates as a 24-h rapid diagnostic test for clinical mastitis on a dairy farm

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A field study evaluation of Petrifilm™ plates as a 24-h rapid diagnostic test for clinical mastitis on a dairy farm. / Mansion-de Vries, Elisabeth Maria; Knorr, Nicole; Paduch, Jan Hendrik; Zinke, Claudia; Hoedemaker, Martina; Krömker, Volker.

In: Preventive Veterinary Medicine, Vol. 113, No. 4, 01.03.2014, p. 620-624.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Mansion-de Vries, EM, Knorr, N, Paduch, JH, Zinke, C, Hoedemaker, M & Krömker, V 2014, 'A field study evaluation of Petrifilm™ plates as a 24-h rapid diagnostic test for clinical mastitis on a dairy farm', Preventive Veterinary Medicine, vol. 113, no. 4, pp. 620-624. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.prevetmed.2013.11.019

APA

Mansion-de Vries, E. M., Knorr, N., Paduch, J. H., Zinke, C., Hoedemaker, M., & Krömker, V. (2014). A field study evaluation of Petrifilm™ plates as a 24-h rapid diagnostic test for clinical mastitis on a dairy farm. Preventive Veterinary Medicine, 113(4), 620-624. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.prevetmed.2013.11.019

Vancouver

Mansion-de Vries EM, Knorr N, Paduch JH, Zinke C, Hoedemaker M, Krömker V. A field study evaluation of Petrifilm™ plates as a 24-h rapid diagnostic test for clinical mastitis on a dairy farm. Preventive Veterinary Medicine. 2014 Mar 1;113(4):620-624. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.prevetmed.2013.11.019

Author

Mansion-de Vries, Elisabeth Maria ; Knorr, Nicole ; Paduch, Jan Hendrik ; Zinke, Claudia ; Hoedemaker, Martina ; Krömker, Volker. / A field study evaluation of Petrifilm™ plates as a 24-h rapid diagnostic test for clinical mastitis on a dairy farm. In: Preventive Veterinary Medicine. 2014 ; Vol. 113, No. 4. pp. 620-624.

Bibtex

@article{aee4fbcae6554f12aea5a28f0267ff93,
title = "A field study evaluation of Petrifilm{\texttrademark} plates as a 24-h rapid diagnostic test for clinical mastitis on a dairy farm",
abstract = "Clinical mastitis is one of the most common and expensive diseases of dairy cattle. To make an informed treatment decision, it is important to know the causative pathogen. However, no detection of bacterial growth can be made in approximately 30% of all clinical cases of mastitis. Before selecting the treatment regimen, it is important to know whether the mastitis-causing pathogen (MCP) is Gram-positive or Gram-negative. The aim of this field study was to investigate whether using two 3M Petrifilm{\texttrademark} products on-farm (which conveys a higher degree of sample freshness but also bears a higher risk for contamination than working in a lab) as 24-h rapid diagnostic of clinical mastitis achieved results that were comparable to the conventional microbiological diagnostic method.AerobicCount (AC)-Petrifilm{\texttrademark} and ColiformCount (CC)-Petrifilm{\texttrademark} were used to identify the total bacterial counts and Gram-negative bacteria in samples from clinical mastitis cases, respectively. Missing growth on both plates was classified as no bacterial detection. Growth only on the AC-Petrifilm{\texttrademark} was assessed as Gram-positive, and growth on both Petrifilm{\texttrademark} plates was assessed as Gram-negative bacterial growth. Additionally, milk samples were analysed by conventional microbiological diagnostic method on aesculin blood agar as a reference method.Overall, 616 samples from clinical mastitis cases were analysed. Using the reference method, Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, mixed bacterial growth, contaminated samples and yeast were determined in 32.6%, 20.0%, 2.5%, 14.1% and 1.1% of the samples, respectively. In 29.7% of the samples, microbiological growth could not be identified. Using the Petrifilm{\texttrademark} concept, bacterial growth was detected in 59% of the culture-negative samples. The sensitivity of the Petrifilm{\texttrademark} for Gram-positive and Gram-negative MCP was 85.2% and 89.9%, respectively. The specificity was 75.4% for Gram-positive and 88.4% for Gram-negative MCP. For the culture-negative samples, sensitivity was 41.0% and specificity was 91.0%. The results indicate that the Petrifilm{\texttrademark} concept is suitable for therapeutic decision-making at the farm level or in veterinary practice. As this concept does not allow any statement about the genus or species of microorganisms, relevant MCP should be assessed periodically at the herd level with conventional microbiological diagnostics.",
keywords = "Cultural diagnosis, Mastitis, Microbiology, Petrifilm{\texttrademark}, Test evaluation",
author = "{Mansion-de Vries}, {Elisabeth Maria} and Nicole Knorr and Paduch, {Jan Hendrik} and Claudia Zinke and Martina Hoedemaker and Volker Kr{\"o}mker",
year = "2014",
month = mar,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.prevetmed.2013.11.019",
language = "English",
volume = "113",
pages = "620--624",
journal = "Preventive Veterinary Medicine",
issn = "0167-5877",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A field study evaluation of Petrifilm™ plates as a 24-h rapid diagnostic test for clinical mastitis on a dairy farm

AU - Mansion-de Vries, Elisabeth Maria

AU - Knorr, Nicole

AU - Paduch, Jan Hendrik

AU - Zinke, Claudia

AU - Hoedemaker, Martina

AU - Krömker, Volker

PY - 2014/3/1

Y1 - 2014/3/1

N2 - Clinical mastitis is one of the most common and expensive diseases of dairy cattle. To make an informed treatment decision, it is important to know the causative pathogen. However, no detection of bacterial growth can be made in approximately 30% of all clinical cases of mastitis. Before selecting the treatment regimen, it is important to know whether the mastitis-causing pathogen (MCP) is Gram-positive or Gram-negative. The aim of this field study was to investigate whether using two 3M Petrifilm™ products on-farm (which conveys a higher degree of sample freshness but also bears a higher risk for contamination than working in a lab) as 24-h rapid diagnostic of clinical mastitis achieved results that were comparable to the conventional microbiological diagnostic method.AerobicCount (AC)-Petrifilm™ and ColiformCount (CC)-Petrifilm™ were used to identify the total bacterial counts and Gram-negative bacteria in samples from clinical mastitis cases, respectively. Missing growth on both plates was classified as no bacterial detection. Growth only on the AC-Petrifilm™ was assessed as Gram-positive, and growth on both Petrifilm™ plates was assessed as Gram-negative bacterial growth. Additionally, milk samples were analysed by conventional microbiological diagnostic method on aesculin blood agar as a reference method.Overall, 616 samples from clinical mastitis cases were analysed. Using the reference method, Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, mixed bacterial growth, contaminated samples and yeast were determined in 32.6%, 20.0%, 2.5%, 14.1% and 1.1% of the samples, respectively. In 29.7% of the samples, microbiological growth could not be identified. Using the Petrifilm™ concept, bacterial growth was detected in 59% of the culture-negative samples. The sensitivity of the Petrifilm™ for Gram-positive and Gram-negative MCP was 85.2% and 89.9%, respectively. The specificity was 75.4% for Gram-positive and 88.4% for Gram-negative MCP. For the culture-negative samples, sensitivity was 41.0% and specificity was 91.0%. The results indicate that the Petrifilm™ concept is suitable for therapeutic decision-making at the farm level or in veterinary practice. As this concept does not allow any statement about the genus or species of microorganisms, relevant MCP should be assessed periodically at the herd level with conventional microbiological diagnostics.

AB - Clinical mastitis is one of the most common and expensive diseases of dairy cattle. To make an informed treatment decision, it is important to know the causative pathogen. However, no detection of bacterial growth can be made in approximately 30% of all clinical cases of mastitis. Before selecting the treatment regimen, it is important to know whether the mastitis-causing pathogen (MCP) is Gram-positive or Gram-negative. The aim of this field study was to investigate whether using two 3M Petrifilm™ products on-farm (which conveys a higher degree of sample freshness but also bears a higher risk for contamination than working in a lab) as 24-h rapid diagnostic of clinical mastitis achieved results that were comparable to the conventional microbiological diagnostic method.AerobicCount (AC)-Petrifilm™ and ColiformCount (CC)-Petrifilm™ were used to identify the total bacterial counts and Gram-negative bacteria in samples from clinical mastitis cases, respectively. Missing growth on both plates was classified as no bacterial detection. Growth only on the AC-Petrifilm™ was assessed as Gram-positive, and growth on both Petrifilm™ plates was assessed as Gram-negative bacterial growth. Additionally, milk samples were analysed by conventional microbiological diagnostic method on aesculin blood agar as a reference method.Overall, 616 samples from clinical mastitis cases were analysed. Using the reference method, Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, mixed bacterial growth, contaminated samples and yeast were determined in 32.6%, 20.0%, 2.5%, 14.1% and 1.1% of the samples, respectively. In 29.7% of the samples, microbiological growth could not be identified. Using the Petrifilm™ concept, bacterial growth was detected in 59% of the culture-negative samples. The sensitivity of the Petrifilm™ for Gram-positive and Gram-negative MCP was 85.2% and 89.9%, respectively. The specificity was 75.4% for Gram-positive and 88.4% for Gram-negative MCP. For the culture-negative samples, sensitivity was 41.0% and specificity was 91.0%. The results indicate that the Petrifilm™ concept is suitable for therapeutic decision-making at the farm level or in veterinary practice. As this concept does not allow any statement about the genus or species of microorganisms, relevant MCP should be assessed periodically at the herd level with conventional microbiological diagnostics.

KW - Cultural diagnosis

KW - Mastitis

KW - Microbiology

KW - Petrifilm™

KW - Test evaluation

U2 - 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2013.11.019

DO - 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2013.11.019

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 24382427

AN - SCOPUS:84893912387

VL - 113

SP - 620

EP - 624

JO - Preventive Veterinary Medicine

JF - Preventive Veterinary Medicine

SN - 0167-5877

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 237094393