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Comparison of qPCR and blood smear microscopy for the diagnosis of Mycoplasma suis in a French veterinary practice.
Normand, Valérie; Boulbria, Gwenaël; Brissonnier, Mathieu; Bachy, Véronique; Moalic, Pierre-Yves; Berton, Pauline; Bouchet, Franck; Lebret, Arnaud.
Affiliation
  • Normand V; Porc.Spective Swine Vet Practice, ZA de Gohélève, rue Joseph et Etienne Montgolfier, 56920 Noyal Pontivy, France.
  • Boulbria G; Porc.Spective Swine Vet Practice, ZA de Gohélève, rue Joseph et Etienne Montgolfier, 56920 Noyal Pontivy, France.
  • Brissonnier M; Porc.Spective Swine Vet Practice, ZA de Gohélève, rue Joseph et Etienne Montgolfier, 56920 Noyal Pontivy, France.
  • Bachy V; Orbio Finalab Veterinary Laboratory Group, 12 rue du 35ème regiment d'aviation, 69500 Bron, France.
  • Moalic PY; Labofarm Finalab Veterinary Laboratory Group, 4 rue Théodore Botrel, 22600 Loudéac, France.
  • Berton P; Porc.Spective Swine Vet Practice, ZA de Gohélève, rue Joseph et Etienne Montgolfier, 56920 Noyal Pontivy, France.
  • Bouchet F; Porc.Spective Swine Vet Practice, ZA de Gohélève, rue Joseph et Etienne Montgolfier, 56920 Noyal Pontivy, France.
  • Lebret A; Porc.Spective Swine Vet Practice, ZA de Gohélève, rue Joseph et Etienne Montgolfier, 56920 Noyal Pontivy, France.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32099660
ABSTRACT
Mycoplasma suis (M. suis) is an haemotropic Mycoplasma that adheres and invades erythrocytes and is responsible for infectious anaemia of pigs. Infections with M. suis have been reported worldwide. Clinical signs after M. suis infection can be significant particularly for the breeding herd in the period around farrowing but consequences are highly variable with some infected pigs never exhibiting clinical disease. The study aimed to determine the clinical relevance of Giemsa-stained blood smear for the diagnosis of M. suis compared with qPCR results. In our study, the comparison of qPCR results with microscopic investigation of Giemsa-stained blood smears revealed a lower sensitivity of the microscopic

method:

only 33 out of 102 qPCR positive blood samples were microscopically positive (M. suis visualised). No relationship between mean qPCR loads and microscopic observation was observed. Although more costly, qPCR is probably the best diagnostic tool available today for M. suis diagnosis.
Key words

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Diagnostic_studies Language: En Year: 2020 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Diagnostic_studies Language: En Year: 2020 Type: Article