Revue d’Elevage et de Médecine Vétérinaire des Pays Tropicaux (Mar 2001)

Isolation of <em>Clostridium septicum</em> during a Blackleg Outbreak in Madagascar

  • J. J. Rajaonarison,
  • R. Andriamihamina,
  • M. Fatou-Rakotobe,
  • V. Rafaliarisoa,
  • E. Randrianasolo,
  • C. Y. Maharavo Rahantamalala

DOI
https://doi.org/10.19182/remvt.9769
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 54, no. 3-4
pp. 183 – 186

Abstract

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Blackleg outbreaks have been reported at various locations in Vakinankaratra area (Madagascar) in 1996 and 1997, and caused the death of 588 head of cattle within seven months. Even animals that had been vaccinated between April and August 1996 were not spared from the disease. After performing bacteriological investigations on samples in March 1997, another blackleg agent, Clostridium septicum, was isolated, and its presence was reported in the country for the first time. The Institute for Applied Biotechnology in the Tropics of Goettingen (Germany) confirmed the diagnosis by the gas chromatography technique in May. An experimental vaccine was developed from that strain in order to fill the lacking valence in the conventional product. The isolation of C. septicum occurred 28 years after the first outbreaks of blackleg caused by Clostridium chauvoei. Its origin is briefly discussed.

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