Tiziana Trogu, Giancarlo Ferrari, Ayham Abdulkader, Mario Younan, Jaffan Dayub, Efrem A. Foglia, Shahin Baiomy, Cornelis van Maanen, Hashim Abdelbaky Mansour, Ausama A. Yousif, Emad Bennour, Nussieba A. Osman, Mohammad Khalifeh, Fabrizio Rosso, Santina Grazioli
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Information on the circulation of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in Western Syria is very limited. It is known that the country is affected by a prolonged humanitarian crisis that may certainly have contributed to such lack of information and the latest available data date back to 2002. Since 2021, there has been a significant increase in reporting of FMD clinical cases in dairy cattle in the region that led to implementing a vaccination campaign, using a tetravalent vaccine and targeting 35 subdistricts in the governorates of Aleppo and Idleb. Sampling for postvaccination monitoring was carried out, on average, around 2 months from the date of vaccination. Sera from 886 animals were collected and tested through ELISA tests to detect antibodies against FMD virus nonstructural proteins (NSPs) and structural proteins (SPs). Results revealed the presence of antibodies in 22.6% of the animals, directed towards viral NSP, indicating a previous infection. This was likely due to a rather recent exposure, considering the comparable NSP antibody prevalences among different age groups. Serological analyses revealed a good antibody response to Asia1 serotype following vaccination but an insufficient antibody response to serotypes A and O. Multiple logistic regression of the serological titers obtained for the different serotypes showed a significant association between high titers detected for serotype O and positivity towards the NSP of the virus. This result suggests the recent circulation of serotype O in the area under consideration.
期刊介绍:
Transboundary and Emerging Diseases brings together in one place the latest research on infectious diseases considered to hold the greatest economic threat to animals and humans worldwide. The journal provides a venue for global research on their diagnosis, prevention and management, and for papers on public health, pathogenesis, epidemiology, statistical modeling, diagnostics, biosecurity issues, genomics, vaccine development and rapid communication of new outbreaks. Papers should include timely research approaches using state-of-the-art technologies. The editors encourage papers adopting a science-based approach on socio-economic and environmental factors influencing the management of the bio-security threat posed by these diseases, including risk analysis and disease spread modeling. Preference will be given to communications focusing on novel science-based approaches to controlling transboundary and emerging diseases. The following topics are generally considered out-of-scope, but decisions are made on a case-by-case basis (for example, studies on cryptic wildlife populations, and those on potential species extinctions):
Pathogen discovery: a common pathogen newly recognised in a specific country, or a new pathogen or genetic sequence for which there is little context about — or insights regarding — its emergence or spread.
Prevalence estimation surveys and risk factor studies based on survey (rather than longitudinal) methodology, except when such studies are unique. Surveys of knowledge, attitudes and practices are within scope.
Diagnostic test development if not accompanied by robust sensitivity and specificity estimation from field studies.
Studies focused only on laboratory methods in which relevance to disease emergence and spread is not obvious or can not be inferred (“pure research” type studies).
Narrative literature reviews which do not generate new knowledge. Systematic and scoping reviews, and meta-analyses are within scope.