Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
The role of nuclear technologies in the diagnosis and control of livestock diseases--a review.
- Journal:
- Tropical animal health and production
- Year:
- 2012
- Authors:
- Viljoen, Gerrit J & Luckins, Antony G
- Affiliation:
- Animal Production and Health Section
- Species:
- bird
Plain-English summary
This review discusses how nuclear technologies have been important in diagnosing and managing diseases in livestock. It highlights the use of radiation to create vaccines for various pathogens and how recent advancements could improve vaccine storage and transport. The review also mentions how these technologies have helped in diagnosing diseases, especially when samples need to be sent internationally or when handling dangerous pathogens. While modern methods like enzyme immunoassays and molecular techniques are now more common, the sensitivity and accuracy achieved with older isotopic methods were groundbreaking. Overall, the review emphasizes the ongoing relevance of these technologies in animal health, particularly in tracking disease spread and ensuring safety in laboratory settings.
Abstract
Nuclear and nuclear-related technologies have played an important role in animal health, particularly in relation to disease diagnosis and characterization of pathogenic organisms. This review focuses primarily on how and where nuclear technologies, both non-isotopic and isotopic methods, have made their impact in the past and where it might be expected they could have an impact in the future. The review outlines the extensive use of radiation attenuation in attempts to create vaccines for a multiplicity of pathogenic organisms and how the technology is being re-examined in the light of recent advances in irradiation techniques and cryopreservation/lyophilization that might obviate some of the problems of maintenance of viable, attenuate vaccines and their transport and use in the field. This approach could be used for a number of parasitic diseases where vaccination has been problematic and where investigations into the development of molecular vaccines have still failed to deliver satisfactory candidates for generating protective immune responses. Irradiation of antigens or serum samples also has its uses in diagnosis, especially when the samples need to be transported across international boundaries, or when handling the pathogens in question when carrying out a test presents serious health hazards to laboratory personnel. The present-day extensive use of enzyme immunoassays and molecular methods (e.g., polymerase chain reaction) for diagnosis and characterization of animal pathogens has its origins in the use of isotope-labeled antigens and antibodies. These isotopic techniques that included the use of 75Se, 32P, 125I, and 35S isotopes enabled a level of sensitivity and specificity that was hitherto unrealized, and it is prescient to remind ourselves of just how successful these technologies were, in spite of their infrequent use nowadays. Finally, the review looks at the potential for stable isotope analysis for a variety of applications--in the tracking of animal migrations, where the migrant are potential carriers of transboundary animal diseases, and where it would be useful to determine the origins of the carrier, e.g., Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza and its dissemination by wild water fowl. Other applications could be in monitoring sequestered microbial culture (e.g., rinderpest virus) where in the case of accidental or deliberate release of infective culture it would be possible to identify the laboratory from which the isolate originated.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22286376/