Brucellosis as an emerging threat in developing economies: lessons from Nigeria

Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa, has a large proportion of the world’s poor livestock keepers, and is a hotspot for neglected zoonoses. A review of the 127 accessible publications on brucellosis in Nigeria reveals only scant and fragmented evidence on its spatial and temporal dis...

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Main Authors: Ducrotoy, M.J. (Marie J.), Bertu, W.J. (Wilson J.), Ocholi, R.A. (Reuben A.), Gusi, A.M. (Amahyel M.), Bryssinckx, W. (Ward), Welburn, S.C. (Susan C.), Moriyon, I. (Ignacio)
Format: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Language:eng
Published: Public Library of Science 2015
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10171/38342
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author Ducrotoy, M.J. (Marie J.)
Bertu, W.J. (Wilson J.)
Ocholi, R.A. (Reuben A.)
Gusi, A.M. (Amahyel M.)
Bryssinckx, W. (Ward)
Welburn, S.C. (Susan C.)
Moriyon, I. (Ignacio)
author_facet Ducrotoy, M.J. (Marie J.)
Bertu, W.J. (Wilson J.)
Ocholi, R.A. (Reuben A.)
Gusi, A.M. (Amahyel M.)
Bryssinckx, W. (Ward)
Welburn, S.C. (Susan C.)
Moriyon, I. (Ignacio)
author_sort Ducrotoy, M.J. (Marie J.)
collection DSpace
description Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa, has a large proportion of the world’s poor livestock keepers, and is a hotspot for neglected zoonoses. A review of the 127 accessible publications on brucellosis in Nigeria reveals only scant and fragmented evidence on its spatial and temporal distribution in different epidemiological contexts. The few bacteriological studies conducted demonstrate the existence of Brucella abortus in cattle and sheep, but evidence for B. melitensis in small ruminants is dated and unclear. The bulk of the evidence consists of seroprevalence studies, but test standardization and validation are not always adequately described, and misinterpretations exist with regard to sensitivity and/or specificity and ability to identify the infecting Brucella species. Despite this, early studies suggest that although brucellosis was endemic in extensive nomadic systems, seroprevalence was low, and brucellosis was not perceived as a real burden; recent studies, however, may reflect a changing trend. Concerning human brucellosis, no studies have identified the Brucella species and most reports provide only serological evidence of contact with Brucella in the classical risk groups; some suggest brucellosis misdiagnoses as malaria or other febrile conditions. The investigation of a severe outbreak that occurred in the late 1970s describes the emergence of animal and human disease caused by the settling of previously nomadic populations during the Sahelian drought. There appears to be an increasing risk of reemergence of brucellosis in sub-Saharan Africa, as a result of the co-existence of pastoralist movements and the increase of intensive management resulting from growing urbanization and food demand. Highly contagious zoonoses like brucellosis pose a threat with far-reaching social and political consequences.
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spelling oai:dadun.unav.edu:10171-383422020-03-03T10:45:05Z Brucellosis as an emerging threat in developing economies: lessons from Nigeria Ducrotoy, M.J. (Marie J.) Bertu, W.J. (Wilson J.) Ocholi, R.A. (Reuben A.) Gusi, A.M. (Amahyel M.) Bryssinckx, W. (Ward) Welburn, S.C. (Susan C.) Moriyon, I. (Ignacio) Materias Investigacion::Ciencias de la Salud::Microbiología y biología molecular Brucellosis Bacterial isolation Serological reaction Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa, has a large proportion of the world’s poor livestock keepers, and is a hotspot for neglected zoonoses. A review of the 127 accessible publications on brucellosis in Nigeria reveals only scant and fragmented evidence on its spatial and temporal distribution in different epidemiological contexts. The few bacteriological studies conducted demonstrate the existence of Brucella abortus in cattle and sheep, but evidence for B. melitensis in small ruminants is dated and unclear. The bulk of the evidence consists of seroprevalence studies, but test standardization and validation are not always adequately described, and misinterpretations exist with regard to sensitivity and/or specificity and ability to identify the infecting Brucella species. Despite this, early studies suggest that although brucellosis was endemic in extensive nomadic systems, seroprevalence was low, and brucellosis was not perceived as a real burden; recent studies, however, may reflect a changing trend. Concerning human brucellosis, no studies have identified the Brucella species and most reports provide only serological evidence of contact with Brucella in the classical risk groups; some suggest brucellosis misdiagnoses as malaria or other febrile conditions. The investigation of a severe outbreak that occurred in the late 1970s describes the emergence of animal and human disease caused by the settling of previously nomadic populations during the Sahelian drought. There appears to be an increasing risk of reemergence of brucellosis in sub-Saharan Africa, as a result of the co-existence of pastoralist movements and the increase of intensive management resulting from growing urbanization and food demand. Highly contagious zoonoses like brucellosis pose a threat with far-reaching social and political consequences. 2015-05-18T08:55:50Z 2015-05-18T08:55:50Z 2014 info:eu-repo/semantics/article https://hdl.handle.net/10171/38342 eng info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/221948 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess application/pdf Public Library of Science
spellingShingle Materias Investigacion::Ciencias de la Salud::Microbiología y biología molecular
Brucellosis
Bacterial isolation
Serological reaction
Ducrotoy, M.J. (Marie J.)
Bertu, W.J. (Wilson J.)
Ocholi, R.A. (Reuben A.)
Gusi, A.M. (Amahyel M.)
Bryssinckx, W. (Ward)
Welburn, S.C. (Susan C.)
Moriyon, I. (Ignacio)
Brucellosis as an emerging threat in developing economies: lessons from Nigeria
title Brucellosis as an emerging threat in developing economies: lessons from Nigeria
title_full Brucellosis as an emerging threat in developing economies: lessons from Nigeria
title_fullStr Brucellosis as an emerging threat in developing economies: lessons from Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Brucellosis as an emerging threat in developing economies: lessons from Nigeria
title_short Brucellosis as an emerging threat in developing economies: lessons from Nigeria
title_sort brucellosis as an emerging threat in developing economies: lessons from nigeria
topic Materias Investigacion::Ciencias de la Salud::Microbiología y biología molecular
Brucellosis
Bacterial isolation
Serological reaction
url https://hdl.handle.net/10171/38342
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