Recurrent mastitis–persistent or new infections?

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Recurrent mastitis–persistent or new infections? / Wente, Nicole; Grieger, Ann-Sophie; Klocke, Doris; Paduch, Jan-Hendrik; Zhang, Yanchao; Leimbach, Stefanie; tho Seeth, Martin; Mansion-de Vries, Ellen; Mohr, Elmar; Krömker, Volker.

In: Veterinary Microbiology, Vol. 244, 108682, 2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Wente, N, Grieger, A-S, Klocke, D, Paduch, J-H, Zhang, Y, Leimbach, S, tho Seeth, M, Mansion-de Vries, E, Mohr, E & Krömker, V 2020, 'Recurrent mastitis–persistent or new infections?', Veterinary Microbiology, vol. 244, 108682. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetmic.2020.108682

APA

Wente, N., Grieger, A-S., Klocke, D., Paduch, J-H., Zhang, Y., Leimbach, S., tho Seeth, M., Mansion-de Vries, E., Mohr, E., & Krömker, V. (2020). Recurrent mastitis–persistent or new infections? Veterinary Microbiology, 244, [108682]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetmic.2020.108682

Vancouver

Wente N, Grieger A-S, Klocke D, Paduch J-H, Zhang Y, Leimbach S et al. Recurrent mastitis–persistent or new infections? Veterinary Microbiology. 2020;244. 108682. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetmic.2020.108682

Author

Wente, Nicole ; Grieger, Ann-Sophie ; Klocke, Doris ; Paduch, Jan-Hendrik ; Zhang, Yanchao ; Leimbach, Stefanie ; tho Seeth, Martin ; Mansion-de Vries, Ellen ; Mohr, Elmar ; Krömker, Volker. / Recurrent mastitis–persistent or new infections?. In: Veterinary Microbiology. 2020 ; Vol. 244.

Bibtex

@article{e9e451187b1047d5b5048a22356fe34d,
title = "Recurrent mastitis–persistent or new infections?",
abstract = "Recurrent clinical mastitis contributes to around half of all infections having an economic impact in the dairy industry. It leads to milk yield reduction, increased risk of mortality, and culling, and may be caused by new infections or a persistent infection after previous treatment. Disease management is dependent on the infecting species, necessitating accurate identification of the pathogen in the range of persistent and reinfection cases amongrecurrentinfectionsusingcultureandmolecularbiologicalanalysis.Milksamplesfromdiagnosedclinical mastitis cases were collected from three Northern German dairy farms between 2011 and 2015. Totally, 2043 diagnosed mastitiscases were examined at quarter level(1598 (78.2 %) first and 445 (21.8 %) recurrentmastitis casesinlactation).Amongtherecurrentcases,145(32.6%)caseswereconfirmedtoharborthesamepathogenic species as previous infections. RAPD PCR confirmed the same species strain in 49 (11 %) of the recurrent infections. The contribution of new infections as compared to persistent infections in cases of clinical mastitis is clear from the data. Future studies in recurrent clinical mastitis control should be focused on influencing factors to prevent new infections in addition to therapeutic intervention and bacteriological cure.",
author = "Nicole Wente and Ann-Sophie Grieger and Doris Klocke and Jan-Hendrik Paduch and Yanchao Zhang and Stefanie Leimbach and {tho Seeth}, Martin and {Mansion-de Vries}, Ellen and Elmar Mohr and Volker Kr{\"o}mker",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1016/j.vetmic.2020.108682",
language = "English",
volume = "244",
journal = "Veterinary Microbiology",
issn = "0378-1135",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Recurrent mastitis–persistent or new infections?

AU - Wente, Nicole

AU - Grieger, Ann-Sophie

AU - Klocke, Doris

AU - Paduch, Jan-Hendrik

AU - Zhang, Yanchao

AU - Leimbach, Stefanie

AU - tho Seeth, Martin

AU - Mansion-de Vries, Ellen

AU - Mohr, Elmar

AU - Krömker, Volker

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Recurrent clinical mastitis contributes to around half of all infections having an economic impact in the dairy industry. It leads to milk yield reduction, increased risk of mortality, and culling, and may be caused by new infections or a persistent infection after previous treatment. Disease management is dependent on the infecting species, necessitating accurate identification of the pathogen in the range of persistent and reinfection cases amongrecurrentinfectionsusingcultureandmolecularbiologicalanalysis.Milksamplesfromdiagnosedclinical mastitis cases were collected from three Northern German dairy farms between 2011 and 2015. Totally, 2043 diagnosed mastitiscases were examined at quarter level(1598 (78.2 %) first and 445 (21.8 %) recurrentmastitis casesinlactation).Amongtherecurrentcases,145(32.6%)caseswereconfirmedtoharborthesamepathogenic species as previous infections. RAPD PCR confirmed the same species strain in 49 (11 %) of the recurrent infections. The contribution of new infections as compared to persistent infections in cases of clinical mastitis is clear from the data. Future studies in recurrent clinical mastitis control should be focused on influencing factors to prevent new infections in addition to therapeutic intervention and bacteriological cure.

AB - Recurrent clinical mastitis contributes to around half of all infections having an economic impact in the dairy industry. It leads to milk yield reduction, increased risk of mortality, and culling, and may be caused by new infections or a persistent infection after previous treatment. Disease management is dependent on the infecting species, necessitating accurate identification of the pathogen in the range of persistent and reinfection cases amongrecurrentinfectionsusingcultureandmolecularbiologicalanalysis.Milksamplesfromdiagnosedclinical mastitis cases were collected from three Northern German dairy farms between 2011 and 2015. Totally, 2043 diagnosed mastitiscases were examined at quarter level(1598 (78.2 %) first and 445 (21.8 %) recurrentmastitis casesinlactation).Amongtherecurrentcases,145(32.6%)caseswereconfirmedtoharborthesamepathogenic species as previous infections. RAPD PCR confirmed the same species strain in 49 (11 %) of the recurrent infections. The contribution of new infections as compared to persistent infections in cases of clinical mastitis is clear from the data. Future studies in recurrent clinical mastitis control should be focused on influencing factors to prevent new infections in addition to therapeutic intervention and bacteriological cure.

U2 - 10.1016/j.vetmic.2020.108682

DO - 10.1016/j.vetmic.2020.108682

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32402348

VL - 244

JO - Veterinary Microbiology

JF - Veterinary Microbiology

SN - 0378-1135

M1 - 108682

ER -

ID: 240531305