How to translate text using browser tools
21 April 2022 EXPLORING THE USE OF THE ERYTHROCYTE SEDIMENTATION RATE AS AN INFLAMMATORY MARKER FOR FREE-RANGING WILDLIFE: A CASE STUDY IN AFRICAN BUFFALO (SYNCERUS CAFFER)
Eberle Yarborough, Caroline Glidden, Courtney Coon, Claire Couch, Danielle Sisson, Jennifer Johns, Anna Jolles, Brianna Beechler
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Measuring inflammatory markers is critical to evaluating both recent infection status and overall human and animal health; however, there are relatively few techniques that do not require specialized equipment or personnel for detecting inflammation among wildlife. Such techniques are useful in that they help determine individual and population-level inflammatory status without the infrastructure and reagents that many more-specific assays require. One such technique, known as the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), is a measure of how quickly erythrocytes (red blood cells) settle in serum, with a faster rate indicating a general, underlying inflammatory process is occurring. The technique is simple, inexpensive, and can be performed in the field without specialized equipment. We took advantage of a population of African buffalo (Syncerus caffer), well studied from June 2014 to May 2017, to understand the utility of ESR in an important wildlife species. When ESR was compared with other markers of immunity in African buffalo, it correlated to known measures of inflammation. We found that a faster ESR was significantly positively correlated with increased total globulin levels and significantly negatively correlated with increased red blood cell count and albumin levels. We then evaluated if ESR correlated to the incidence of five respiratory pathogens and infection with two tick-borne pathogens in African buffalo. Our results suggest that elevated ESR is associated with the incidence of bovine viral diarrhea virus infection, parainfluenza virus, and Mannheimia haemolytica infections as well as concurrent Anaplasma marginale and Anaplasma centrale coinfection. These findings suggest that ESR is a useful field test as an inflammatory marker in individuals and herds, helping us better monitor overall health status in wild populations.

© Wildlife Disease Association 2022
Eberle Yarborough, Caroline Glidden, Courtney Coon, Claire Couch, Danielle Sisson, Jennifer Johns, Anna Jolles, and Brianna Beechler "EXPLORING THE USE OF THE ERYTHROCYTE SEDIMENTATION RATE AS AN INFLAMMATORY MARKER FOR FREE-RANGING WILDLIFE: A CASE STUDY IN AFRICAN BUFFALO (SYNCERUS CAFFER)," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 58(2), 298-308, (21 April 2022). https://doi.org/10.7589/JWD-D-21-00114
Received: 1 July 2021; Accepted: 3 December 2021; Published: 21 April 2022
KEYWORDS
African buffalo
disease incidence
erythrocyte sedimentation rate
Inflammation
population health
Syncerus caffer
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top