2018
DOI: 10.17582/journal.aavs/2018/6.4.176.182
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Prevalence and Molecular Identification of Haemoprotozoan Diseases of Cattle in Bangladesh

Abstract: | A total 300 blood samples were randomly collected (150 crossbred and 150 local cattle) in three consecutive seasons (summer, rainy and winter) from four selected areas, namely Nasirabad, Patia, Bayezid and Jointika under Chittagong district of Bangladesh. The effects of topography, season, age and gender were tested in both crossbred and local cattle. The PCR was performed after consequence screening by light microscopy, which exhibited that 22 samples (14 Anaplasmaspp, 6 Babesia spp and 2 for mixed infectio… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Vaccination is the only effective way to control the spread of LSDV in endemic countries. Stampingout, culling infected animals and restriction of animal movement are recommended to control this virus (OIE, 2017; Bary et al, 2018;Ali et al, 2019). Bangladesh first reported LSD outbreak to OIE in August 16 Giasuddin et al 2019 (OIE, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Vaccination is the only effective way to control the spread of LSDV in endemic countries. Stampingout, culling infected animals and restriction of animal movement are recommended to control this virus (OIE, 2017; Bary et al, 2018;Ali et al, 2019). Bangladesh first reported LSD outbreak to OIE in August 16 Giasuddin et al 2019 (OIE, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gastrointestinal (GI) parasitic infections may be considered as one of the major constraints in cattle production. The infection causes productivity losses through reduced feed intake and decreased efficiency in feed utilization due to subclinical or chronic infections that are responsible for economic losses (Renaldi et al, 2011;Bary et al, 2018). In Bangladesh, disease problems specially related to parasitism constitute a serious threat.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…with a prevalence of 19%, 43%, and 33%, respectively. Here, the overall prevalence in cattle is found to be 50% with a breakdown between high-yielding cross-breed cattle (80%) and indigenous cattle (22%), demonstrating a significantly increased susceptibility in the popular new emerging cross-breed cattle ( Bary et al , 2018 ). Tick reproduction has also been demonstrated to increase as humidity increases to 85% ( Caminade et al , 2019 ), as a result of blood protozoa infestation during summer season increasing in Bangladesh cattle ( Bary et al , 2018 ).…”
Section: Vector-borne Pathogenmentioning
confidence: 92%