Tuberculosis

Mycobacterium bovis


This is the organism responsible for classic bovine tuberculosis, but it was also of great concern in humans as a zoonotic infection prior to the onset of pasteurization. It is still a concern in underdeveloped regions of the world where pasteurization is not practiced.

M. bovis infection in cows:

As with M. tuberculosis in people, M. bovis is spread from cow-to-cow by inhalation of the organism in aerosolized droplets. The pathology in cows is also similar to the pathology of M. tuberculosis in humans, with pulmonary TB leading to chronic debilitation and coughing, and the potential for systemic spread to other organs. In addition, 1 to 2% of M. bovis infected cows develop mycobacterial mastitis with shedding of the organism in the milk.

M. bovis infection in other animals:

Zoonotic M. bovis:

Control of bovine TB:

Bovine tuberculosis (M. bovis), like brucellosis, is controlled in the U.S. through a national eradication program administered through the United States Department of Agriculture. The fundamental aspects of this program are:

The problem of cervids:

Badgers in the U.K. and opossums in New Zealand have also been implicated as wildlife reservoirs for infection of cattle. The badger infections in England resulted in infection of 15.8% of cattle herds in Devon, England in 2003.

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