Review on Bovine Tuberculosis: An Emerging Disease Associated with Multidrug-Resistant Mycobacterium Species.
Mohamed BorhamAtef OreibyAttia El-GedawyYamen HegazyHazim O KhalifaMagdy Al-GaabaryTetsuya MatsumotoPublished in: Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Bovine tuberculosis is a serious infectious disease affecting a wide range of domesticated and wild animals, representing a worldwide economic and public health burden. The disease is caused by Mycobacterium bovis and infrequently by other pathogenic mycobacteria. The problem of bovine tuberculosis is complicated when the infection is associated with multidrug and extensively drug resistant M. bovis. Many techniques are used for early diagnosis of bovine tuberculosis, either being antemortem or postmortem, each with its diagnostic merits as well as limitations. Antemortem techniques depend either on cellular or on humoral immune responses, while postmortem diagnosis depends on adequate visual inspection, palpation, and subsequent diagnostic procedures such as bacterial isolation, characteristic histopathology, and PCR to reach the final diagnosis. Recently, sequencing and bioinformatics tools have gained increasing importance for the diagnosis of bovine tuberculosis, including, but not limited to typing, detection of mutations, phylogenetic analysis, molecular epidemiology, and interactions occurring within the causative mycobacteria. Consequently, the current review includes consideration of bovine tuberculosis as a disease, conventional and recent diagnostic methods, and the emergence of MDR- Mycobacterium species.
Keyphrases
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- multidrug resistant
- drug resistant
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- public health
- immune response
- acinetobacter baumannii
- hiv aids
- gram negative
- emergency department
- adverse drug
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- infectious diseases
- genetic diversity
- escherichia coli
- hepatitis c virus
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- toll like receptor
- cystic fibrosis
- antiretroviral therapy