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Epidemiological Survey on Eimeria spp. Associated with Diarrhea in Pre-weaned Native Korean Calves
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Epidemiological Survey on Eimeria spp. Associated with Diarrhea in Pre-weaned Native Korean Calves

The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2018;56(6):619-623.
Published online: December 31, 2018

1College of Veterinary Medicine and Institute of Veterinary Science, Kangwon National University, Chuncheon 24341, Korea

2Animal Disease & Biosecurity Team, National Institute of Animal science, Rural Development Administration, Wanju 55365, Korea

3Laboratory of Veterinary Internal Medicine, BK21 PLUS Program for Creative Veterinary Science Research, Research Institute for Veterinary Science and College of Veterinary Medicine, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Korea

4Institute of Animal Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Gyeongsang National University, Jinju 52825, Korea

5College of Veterinary Medicine, Chonbuk National University, Iksan 54596, Korea

6College of Veterinary Medicine, Chungnam National University, Daejeon 34134, Korea

7College of Ecology and Environmental Science, Kyungpook National University, Sangju 37224, Korea

*Corresponding author (kschoi3@knu.ac.kr)

These authors equally contributed to this work.

• Received: July 23, 2018   • Revised: October 7, 2018   • Accepted: October 31, 2018

Copyright © 2018 by The Korean Society for Parasitology and Tropical Medicine

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Epidemiological Survey on Eimeria spp. Associated with Diarrhea in Pre-weaned Native Korean Calves
Image
Fig. 1 Direct micrographs of Eimeria oocysts. (A) E. bukidnonensis, (B) E. bovis, (C) E. auburnensis, (D) E. zuernii, (E) E. subspherica.
Epidemiological Survey on Eimeria spp. Associated with Diarrhea in Pre-weaned Native Korean Calves

Association between Eimeria spp. infection and diarrhea determined using the logistic regression models with random farm effect

Variable Category No. examined (n=479) No. of diarrheic feces (n=191) No. of normal feces (n=288) P-value OR (95% CI)
Eimeria infection (%) No (Reference) 355 (74.1) 132 (69.1) 223 (77.4) - -
Yes 124 (25.9) 59 (30.9) 65 (22.6) 0.03 1.76 (1.06–2.92)
Single infection 54 (11.3) 22 (11.5) 32 (11.2) 0.33 1.29 (0.77–2.15)
Mixed-infection 70 (14.6) 37 (19.4) 33 (11.5) 0.03 2.21 (1.09–4.49)

Association between the different Eimeria infections and diarrhea determined by the logistic regression models with random farm effect

Eimeria species Total No. (n=479) No. of diarrheic feces (n=191) No. of normal feces (n=288) P-value OR (95% CI)
E. zuernii (total) 90 (18.8) 42 (22.0) 48 (16.7) 0.10 1.76 (0.89–3.46)
E. auburnensis (total) 60 (12.5) 26 (13.6) 34 (11.8) 0.35 1.22 (0.80–1.87)
E. bovis (total) 36 (7.5) 19 (9.9) 17 (5.9) 0.14 2.12 (0.78–5.76)
E. subspherica (total) 28 (5.8) 16 (8.4) 12 (4.2) 0.01 2.64 (1.24–5.61)
E. bukidnonensis (total) 5 (1.0) 5 (2.6) 0 (0) 0.00 967.39 (825.08–1,134.25)

Concurrent Eimeria spp. significantly associated with diarrheic feces determined by the logistic regression model with random farm effect

Reference Concurrent Eimeria spp. P-value OR (95% CI)
E. bovis E. subspherica <0.00 Not tested
E. zuernii + E. auburnensis + E. subspherica <0.00 Not tested

E. zuernii E. auburnensis + E. subspherica 0.01 2.46 (1.28–4.74)
E. bovis + E. auburnensis + E. subspherica <0.00 5.10 (2.40–10.82)

E. auburnensis E. bukidnonensis <0.00 2,388.48 (1,009.71–5,650.00)
Table 1 Association between Eimeria spp. infection and diarrhea determined using the logistic regression models with random farm effect
Table 2 Association between the different Eimeria infections and diarrhea determined by the logistic regression models with random farm effect
Table 3 Concurrent Eimeria spp. significantly associated with diarrheic feces determined by the logistic regression model with random farm effect