McCarron, J. L., et al. “Laboratory Evaluation of 3M Petrifilms and University of Minnesota Bi-Plates As Potential On-Farm Tests for Clinical Mastitis”. Journal of Dairy Science, vol. 92, no. 5, 2009, pp. 2297-05, https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2008-1661.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: McCarron, J. L.
Author: Keefe, G. P.
Author: McKenna, S. L. B.
Author: Dohoo, I. R.
Author: Poole, D. E.
Date Issued
2009
Abstract

The objective was to determine test characteristics and compare 2 potential on-farm culture systems for clinical mastitis, the Minnesota Easy Culture System II Bi-plate and Petrifilm. The tests were evaluated using clinically positive mastitic milk samples (n=282) to determine their ability to differentiate appropriate treatment groups; all cases that had gram-positive growth were considered treatment candidates (n=161), whereas cases that grew gram-negative organisms only or yielded no bacterial growth were classified as no treatment (n=121). For Petrifilm, both undiluted and 1:10 diluted milk samples were used. To create treatment categories, 2 types of Petrifilms were used, Aerobic Count (AC) and Coliform Count (CC). Both Bi-plates and Petrifilms were read after 24 h of incubation. Analysis was conducted at various colony count thresholds for the Petrifilm test system. The combination of Petrifilms that had the highest sensitivity classified a case as gram-negative if there were ≥20 colonies present on the CC. If there were 5 colonies present on the AC, a case would be classified as gram-positive. The Bi-plate had a sensitivity of 97.9% and a specificity of 68.6%. The Petrifilm test system had a sensitivity of 93.8% and a specificity of 70.1%. There was no significant difference in the sensitivities between the tests. All Bi-plates and Petrifilms were read by a laboratory technician and a group of masked readers with limited microbiology training. Kappa values for the masked readers were 0.75 for Bi-plates and 0.84 and 0.86 for AC and CC Petrifilms, respectively. The Bi-plate and Petrifilm were able to successfully categorize clinical cases of mastitis into 2 treatments based on their ability to detect the presence of a gram-positive organism. Neither method had the ability to determine if a sample was contaminated. The results of this study indicate that both tests were able to appropriately categorize cases, which could potentially result in a reduction in the quantity of antibiotics used to treat clinical cases of mastitis.

Note

McCarron, J. L.: Department of Health Management, University of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown, PEI C1A 4P3, Canada.

Savoy; USA

American Dairy Science Association

Accession Number: 20093160933. Publication Type: Journal Article. Language: English. Subject Subsets: Veterinary Science; Veterinary Science; Dairy Science

Language

  • English

Subjects

  • Minnesota
  • contamination
  • North Central States of USA
  • West North Central States of USA
  • Antibiotics
  • Mastitis
  • dairy science
  • Prion, Viral, Bacterial and Fungal Pathogens of Animals (LL821) (New March 2000)
  • Evaluation
  • coliform count
  • North America
  • America
  • Microbiology (General) (ZZ390)
  • Milk and Dairy Produce (QQ010)
  • OECD Countries
  • coliform bacteria
  • Lake States of USA
  • APEC countries
  • Developed Countries
  • United States of America
  • Pesticides and Drugs (General) (HH400)
  • USA
  • training
  • bacterial count
  • clinical mastitis
  • milk
Page range
2297-2305
Host Title
Journal of Dairy Science
Host Abbreviated Title
J.Dairy Sci.
Volume
92
Issue
5
ISSN
0022-0302
PMID Identifier
19389988

Department