Nathália Maria de Andrade Magalhães , Clécio Henrique Limeira , Rafael Dioni Leandro Costa , Roseane de Araujo Portela , Sérgio Santos de Azevedo , Francisco Selmo Fernandes Alves , Clebert José Alves
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This report presents a systematic review and meta-analysis on the global prevalence of paratuberculosis in sheep, focusing on seropositivity of Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP). This investigation included 1676 records initially, identified from the databases Web of Science, Scopus, Medline and Science Direct. After filtering and reading, twenty-eight articles were selected for the final analysis. The results showed that the pooled prevalence of animals positive for MAP was 8.02 % (95 % CI = 5.04–12.52 %) with significant heterogeneity (I² = 99.3 %), which suggests that there was high variability among results. The prevalence varied according to the continent, such that it was highest in South America (24.45 %) and lowest in Africa (1.34 %). In addition, meta-analysis per herd indicated that the global prevalence was 55.51 % (95 % CI = 44.96–65.58 %), with heterogeneity that was also high (I² = 96.8 %). Analysis of Doi plots demonstrated that there was slight positive asymmetry (LFK index 1.28), which suggests the possibility of publication bias. The meta-analysis demonstrated variation in global prevalence rates of MAP in sheep, with high dissemination among herds, especially in South America and Asia. The heterogeneity of the data indicates methodological differences among studies, thus highlighting the need for standardized investigations to better understand the epidemiology and control of paratuberculosis in sheep globally.
期刊介绍:
Small Ruminant Research publishes original, basic and applied research articles, technical notes, and review articles on research relating to goats, sheep, deer, the New World camelids llama, alpaca, vicuna and guanaco, and the Old World camels.
Topics covered include nutrition, physiology, anatomy, genetics, microbiology, ethology, product technology, socio-economics, management, sustainability and environment, veterinary medicine and husbandry engineering.