Article availables: 927

Upper respiratory tract detection of Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae employing nasopharyngeal swabs in sheeps

Upper respiratory tract detection of Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae employing nasopharyngeal swabs in sheeps
  • Results demonstrate increased diagnostic sensitivity and specificity when sampling with nasopharyngeal swabs as compared to nasal swabs

Flock-level prevalence and characterization of Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae is determined almost exclusively using nasal swabbing followed by molecular detection with either quantitative PCR or multi-locus sequence typing. However, the diagnostic performance and efficiency of swabbing the nasal passage compared to other anatomical locations has not been determined within sheep populations. The goal of this research was to assess the diagnostic capability of nasopharyngeal swabs compared to nasal swabs for detecting Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae. Nasal and nasopharyngeal swabs were collected during a controlled exposure study of domestic sheep with Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae. Both swab types were then analyzed via conventional and quantitative PCR. This dataset ...

To read the full article you must log in with your EGO codes.

EGO | accesso