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Pregnancy rates of beef cattle are not affected by Campylobacter fetus subsp. venerealis real-time PCR-positive breeding sires in New Zealand
Authors: Jackson R, Sanhueza JM, Kelly K, Anderson P, Heuer C, Hughes P, Walker GPublication: New Zealand Veterinary Journal, Volume 62, Issue 5, pp 237-243, Sep 2014
Publisher: Taylor and Francis
Abstract:
AIMS:
METHODS: Veterinarians from four veterinary practices selected beef cattle herds with relatively high and low pregnancy rates between December 2008 and February 2009. Preputial scrapings were collected from bulls used for mating in those herds. Samples were tested using the real-time PCR assay under consideration. Bivariable and multivariable analyses were used to assess the relationship between pregnancy rates in each mob (15-month-old heifers, 27-month-old heifers and mixed-age cows) and the percentage of real-time PCR-positive bulls in each mob.
RESULTS: Sixty-four (28.8%) of 222 bulls tested positive, 130 (58.6%) tested negative, and 28 (12.6%) returned an inconclusive result to the real-time PCR assay. The percentage of bulls testing real-time PCR-positive in these mobs was not associated with pregnancy rates (p=0.757) after controlling for mob, average body condition score of cows, cow to bull ratio, length of the mating period, and farm.
CONCLUSION: Real-time PCR assay results were not associated with pregnancy rates, suggesting that the specificity of the real-time PCR assay was too low to be used to reliably detect
CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: The real-time PCR assay that was assessed in this study should not be used for the detection of
KEY WORDS: Campylobacter fetus subspecies venerealis, real-time PCR, diagnostic specificity, LOESS, ROC, AUC, pregnancy, beef cattle, New Zealand
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