Serological detection of brucellosis among febrile, malaria-negative children and domesticated dogs in an urban African setting

Background: Childhood brucellosis and malaria are co-endemic febrile illnesses in some sub-Saharan African countries. Malaria and brucellosis co-infection or brucellosis sole infections are often missed due to an over emphasis on malaria and the lack of appropriate diagnostic infrastructure. Brucell...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: John B. Kalule, Joseph Tomusange, Teddy Namatovu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2020-09-01
Series:African Journal of Laboratory Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ajlmonline.org/index.php/ajlm/article/view/864
id doaj-72c4615105224f57bdf7b5ba9c6e8b37
record_format Article
spelling doaj-72c4615105224f57bdf7b5ba9c6e8b372020-11-25T01:53:34ZengAOSISAfrican Journal of Laboratory Medicine2225-20022225-20102020-09-0191e1e610.4102/ajlm.v9i1.864283Serological detection of brucellosis among febrile, malaria-negative children and domesticated dogs in an urban African settingJohn B. Kalule0Joseph Tomusange1Teddy Namatovu2Department of Biotechnical and Diagnostic Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Animal Resources Animal and Biosecurity, KampalaDepartment of Biotechnical and Diagnostic Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Animal Resources Animal and Biosecurity, KampalaDepartment of Biotechnical and Diagnostic Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Animal Resources Animal and Biosecurity, KampalaBackground: Childhood brucellosis and malaria are co-endemic febrile illnesses in some sub-Saharan African countries. Malaria and brucellosis co-infection or brucellosis sole infections are often missed due to an over emphasis on malaria and the lack of appropriate diagnostic infrastructure. Brucellosis in dogs is usually overlooked and yet there is extensive contact between humans and their pets. Objective: This study investigated brucellosis in children and dogs using a confirmatory serological testing series that screens for three Brucella sp. Methods: Residual blood samples from malaria smear-negative febrile children were collected and tested for Brucella sp and malaria parasite. During the same period, residual blood samples presented to a veterinary microbiology laboratory in the same area were tested for brucellosis using the same approach. Results: A total of 105 human and 80 canine blood samples were tested for brucellosis antibodies. The seroprevalence of brucellosis was 22.86% (25/105) in children and 1.3% (1/80) in dogs using the Card, buffered acidified plate antigen, and standard plate agglutination tests but was 0% using the rivanol precipitation plate agglutination test. Conclusion: Given that brucellosis can be caused by both smooth and rough colony strains, there is a need to modify the current serological surveillance strategy (targeted at only Brucella abortus and other smooth colony Brucella strains) to figure out the relative contribution of rough colony Brucella strains (B. ovis and B. canis). Since Uganda is endemic for brucellosis there is a need to modify the brucellosis surveillance strategy.https://ajlmonline.org/index.php/ajlm/article/view/864brucellosisserologymalariafebrile illnessdiagnostics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John B. Kalule
Joseph Tomusange
Teddy Namatovu
spellingShingle John B. Kalule
Joseph Tomusange
Teddy Namatovu
Serological detection of brucellosis among febrile, malaria-negative children and domesticated dogs in an urban African setting
African Journal of Laboratory Medicine
brucellosis
serology
malaria
febrile illness
diagnostics
author_facet John B. Kalule
Joseph Tomusange
Teddy Namatovu
author_sort John B. Kalule
title Serological detection of brucellosis among febrile, malaria-negative children and domesticated dogs in an urban African setting
title_short Serological detection of brucellosis among febrile, malaria-negative children and domesticated dogs in an urban African setting
title_full Serological detection of brucellosis among febrile, malaria-negative children and domesticated dogs in an urban African setting
title_fullStr Serological detection of brucellosis among febrile, malaria-negative children and domesticated dogs in an urban African setting
title_full_unstemmed Serological detection of brucellosis among febrile, malaria-negative children and domesticated dogs in an urban African setting
title_sort serological detection of brucellosis among febrile, malaria-negative children and domesticated dogs in an urban african setting
publisher AOSIS
series African Journal of Laboratory Medicine
issn 2225-2002
2225-2010
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Background: Childhood brucellosis and malaria are co-endemic febrile illnesses in some sub-Saharan African countries. Malaria and brucellosis co-infection or brucellosis sole infections are often missed due to an over emphasis on malaria and the lack of appropriate diagnostic infrastructure. Brucellosis in dogs is usually overlooked and yet there is extensive contact between humans and their pets. Objective: This study investigated brucellosis in children and dogs using a confirmatory serological testing series that screens for three Brucella sp. Methods: Residual blood samples from malaria smear-negative febrile children were collected and tested for Brucella sp and malaria parasite. During the same period, residual blood samples presented to a veterinary microbiology laboratory in the same area were tested for brucellosis using the same approach. Results: A total of 105 human and 80 canine blood samples were tested for brucellosis antibodies. The seroprevalence of brucellosis was 22.86% (25/105) in children and 1.3% (1/80) in dogs using the Card, buffered acidified plate antigen, and standard plate agglutination tests but was 0% using the rivanol precipitation plate agglutination test. Conclusion: Given that brucellosis can be caused by both smooth and rough colony strains, there is a need to modify the current serological surveillance strategy (targeted at only Brucella abortus and other smooth colony Brucella strains) to figure out the relative contribution of rough colony Brucella strains (B. ovis and B. canis). Since Uganda is endemic for brucellosis there is a need to modify the brucellosis surveillance strategy.
topic brucellosis
serology
malaria
febrile illness
diagnostics
url https://ajlmonline.org/index.php/ajlm/article/view/864
work_keys_str_mv AT johnbkalule serologicaldetectionofbrucellosisamongfebrilemalarianegativechildrenanddomesticateddogsinanurbanafricansetting
AT josephtomusange serologicaldetectionofbrucellosisamongfebrilemalarianegativechildrenanddomesticateddogsinanurbanafricansetting
AT teddynamatovu serologicaldetectionofbrucellosisamongfebrilemalarianegativechildrenanddomesticateddogsinanurbanafricansetting
_version_ 1724990137084936192