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An outbreak of bovine tuberculosis in a free-living African buffalo (Syncerus caffer--sparrman) population in the Kruger National Park: a preliminary report.
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1996
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PathologyEducationKruger National ParkVeterinary MicrobiologyFree-living African BuffaloInfection ControlAfrican BuffaloPulmonary TuberculosisTuberculosisVeterinary EpidemiologyEpidemiologyIndex CaseEmerging Infectious DiseasesAnimal SciencePreliminary ReportZoonotic DiseaseVeterinary ScienceDisease TransmissionMicrobiologyAnimal Disease PreventionMedicine
Bovine tuberculosis was diagnosed for the first time in an African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) in the Kruger National Park (KNP). The index case was a 2-year-old, emaciated bull which had been found recumbent and obviously ill, near the south-western boundary of the KNP, in July 1990. During a follow-up random sampling of 57 buffalo, from two herds in close proximity to this initial case, nine more suspect cases were found. Mycobacterium bovis was isolated from a lung and thoracic lymph node, respectively, of two of these cases. Histopathologically, all nine of these animals had granulomatous lesions compatible with a diagnosis of mycobacteriosis, but acid-fast organisms could be demonstrated in only one animal.