“…Our prevalence based on ELISA was higher (23.3%) than previously reported (0% in Brazil and 4.1% in Sudan) and based on IFAT was lower (3.3%) than that of previous reports (27.2% in Tunisia and 51.3% in Brazil). The PCR prevalence was nine of 127 animals (7.1%), which is a low prevalence upon comparing to other studies performed in Brazil (BRANDÃO-FILHO et al, 2003;OLIVEIRA et al, 2005;QUARESMA et al, 2011;LIMA et al, 2013;CARDOSO et al, 2015;FERREIRA et al, 2015), South America (ALEXANDER et al, 1998;LIMA et al, 2002), Iran (AKHAVAN et al, 2010;DAVAMI et al, 2013;MIRZAEI et al, 2014), Saudi Arabia (IBRAHIM et al, 1992), Italy (ZANET et al, 2014), Spain (NAVEA-PÉREZ et al, 2015), and Portugal (HELHAZAR et al, 2013). This low prevalence in PCR could be explained by our use of total blood as sample; most other studies used both blood and tissue (liver, spleen, skin, bone marrow).…”