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  5. The History of In Vivo Tuberculin Testing in Bovines: Tuberculosis, a “One Health” Issue
 
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The History of In Vivo Tuberculin Testing in Bovines: Tuberculosis, a “One Health” Issue

Author(s)
Good, Margaret  
Bakker, Douwe  
Duignan, Anthony  
Collins, Daniel M.  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/9961
Date Issued
2018-04-09
Date Available
2019-04-16T07:52:36Z
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) is more than 3 million years old thriving in multiple species. Ancestral Mycobacterium tuberculosis gave rise to multiple strains including Mycobacterium bovis now distributed worldwide with zoonotic transmission happening in both directions between animals and humans. M. bovis in milk caused problems with a significant number of deaths in children under 5 years of age due largely to extrapulmonary TB. This risk was effectively mitigated with widespread milk pasteurization during the twentieth century, and fewer young children were lost to TB. Koch developed tuberculin in 1890 and recognizing the possibility of using tuberculin to detect infected animals the first tests were quickly developed. Bovine TB (bTB) control/eradication programmes followed in the late nineteenth century/early twentieth century. Many scientists collaborated and contributed to the development of tuberculin tests, to refining and optimizing the production and standardization of tuberculin and to determining test sensitivity and specificity using various methodologies and injection sites. The WHO, OIE, and EU have set legal standards for tuberculin production, potency assay performance, and intradermal tests for bovines. Now, those using tuberculin tests for bTB control/eradication programmes rarely, see TB as a disease. Notwithstanding the launch of the first-ever roadmap to combat zoonotic TB, many wonder if bTB is actually a problem? Is there a better way of dealing with bTB? Might alternative skin test sites make the test “better” and easier to perform? Are all tuberculins used for testing equally good? Why have alternative “better” tests not been developed? This review was prompted by these types of questions. This article attempts to succinctly summarize the data in the literature from the late nineteenth century to date to show why TB, and zoonotic TB specifically, was and still is important as a “One Health” concern, and that the necessity to reduce the burden of zoonotic TB, to save lives and secure livelihoods is far too important to await the possible future development of novel diagnostic assays for livestock before renewing efforts to eliminate it. Consequently, it is highly probable that the tuberculin skin test will remain the screening test of choice for farmed livestock for the considerable future.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Journal
Frontiers in Veterinary Science
Volume
5
Issue
59
Copyright (Published Version)
2018 the Authors
Subjects

Tuberculosis origins

Tuberculosis in a soc...

Zoonotic tuberculosis...

Tuberculin test in ca...

One Health and tuberc...

Tuberculosis

Bovine TB

DOI
10.3389/fvets.2018.00059
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name

2018final_GoodBakkerDuignan.pdf

Size

620.42 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

aaf2542ad0f013096c8cf41f97880e06

Owning collection
Veterinary Medicine Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
All other content is subject to copyright.

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