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Advances in Animal and Veterinary Sciences

AAVS_8_11_1175-1179

 

 

Research Article

 

Effects of Fascioliasis on the Economic Losses of Beef Liver at Abu Simbel Abattoir, Aswan Governorate, Egypt

 

Amer MA Rassol1, Ali M. Ahmed2, Hassan M. Sobhy3, Sherein S. Abdelgayed4*, Sahar HA Hekal3

1GOVS/ Abu Simbel veterinary Quarantine, Aswan Governorate, Egypt; 2Deptartment of Food Hygiene, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Arish University, Egypt; 3Department of natural resources, Faculty of African Post Graduated Studies, Cairo University, Egypt; 4Department of Pathology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Cairo University, Giza, Egypt.

 

Abstract | Beef liver as human food is a good source of protein and provides many vitamins as B12, vitamin A, riboflavin and copper. Fascioliasis is an acquired infection occured by eating contaminated water plants and caused by the liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica). Therefore, the aim this of work was to determine i) the liver lesions of cattle in Abu Simbel Abattoir, Aswan Governorate, Egypt imported from Sudan; ii) the prevalence of bovine Fascioliasis and iii) estimate their economic losses as a result of liver lesions. The study was performed for a period of one year from 22 December 2018 to 21 December 2019. During the survey, 81452 male cattle were slaughtered and inspected. The total number of condemned livers was 7553 (9.3%). The pathological conditions causing liver condemnation were Fascioliasis (86.3%), cirrhosis (8.7%), abscesses (2.3%), calcified cyst (1.5%), hepatitis (0.6%), and Cysticercus bovis (0.6%). The total economic losses were 173554.21$ while with respect to Fascioliasis were 152718$. In conclusion, these results indicated that the bovine Fascioliasis was the main cause of liver condemnation in the present study causing highly economic losses.

 

Keywords | Imported cattle, Liver condemnation, Fascioliasis, Abu Simbel abattoir, Economic losses

 

Received | July 14, 2020; Accepted | August 15, 2020; Published | September 01, 2020

*Correspondence | Sherein S. Abdelgayed, Department of Pathology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Cairo University, Giza, Egypt; Email: sherein.abdelgayed@vet.cu.edu.eg

Citation | Rassol AMA, Ahmed AM, Sobhy HM, Abdelgayed SS, Hekal SHA (2020). Effects of fascioliasis on the economic losses of beef liver at Abu Simbel Abattoir, Aswan Governorate, Egypt. Adv. Anim. Vet. Sci. 8(11): 1175-1179.

DOI | http://dx.doi.org/10.17582/journal.aavs/2020/8.11.1175.1179

ISSN (Online) | 2307-8316; ISSN (Print) | 2309-3331

Copyright © 2020 Rassol et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

 

INTRODUCTION

 

Imported animals play a significant role in Egypt to bridge the gap between low domestic production and increased consumption level. According to the Egyptian Guidelines for Cattle Inspection, the carcasses were classified into the categories of capable for human consumption (edible), capable for processing (conditionally edible), and condemned based on the results obtained from the ante-mortem and postmortem inspection (Ahmed et al., 2013). Slaughter houses supply important data that allowing diseases detection of both economic and public health importance (Raji et al., 2010). Liver is the largest gland in the body that play many important functions including synthetic, catabolic, detoxifying, secretory and excretory activities (Kasim et al., 2019; Khan et al., 2020). Pathological affections of liver attributable to a variety of causes including parasites, viruses, mycoses and bacteria (Seid and Melese, 2018; Ali et al., 2020) resulting in great economic losses through condemnation of affected liver at slaughter houses in addition to that the liver lesions may be carry great risks to the consumers’ health (Sanjari et al., 2018). Out of these pathological affections; Fascioliasis plays a great role in direct and indirect economic losses; mainly through mortality, liver condemnation, reduced production of meat, milk, and wool, and expenditure for anthelmintic (Keyyu et al., 2005). In addition to that, Fascioliasis is a zoonotic food and waterborne infection that has a great public health importance (Nyirenda et al., 2019). In Abu Simbel city, thousands of slaughtered animals are processed as meat for human consumption each year. However, there are non-available literatures concerning the prevalence of the pathological lesions affecting liver of imported cattle slaughtered at this abattoir. Therefore, the current study was focused on liver inspections within the processes of ante-mortem and post-mortem inspections in Abu Simbel abattoir to estimate the prevalence of different pathological liver conditions especially hepatic fascioliasis and evaluate their direct economic impact.

 

MATERIALS AND METHODS

 

Ethical statement

Ethical approval was not needed in this study as the liver samples were collected from slaughtered cattle from the abattoir. However, consent from the abattoir authorities was taken prior collection of samples.

 

Study population

Male cattle of Sudanese-origin were kept in quarantine for 21 days under observation and supervision of Egyptian Quarantine Veterinarians in the Sudanese city of Wadi Half (bordering Egypt). Afterwards, cattle are shipped down the Nile to the city of Abu Simbel, Aswan Governorate where they were slaughtered.

 

Specimen collection

Regular visits were done to the Abu Simbel Abattoir during the period from 22 December 2018 to 21 December 2019. Routine post-mortem examination of 81452 slaughtered male cattle was carried out with attention to the hepatic affections. It was examined visually on both parietal and visceral surfaces, then palpated and incised on the visceral surfaces in such a way that the incision come across most of the bile ducts. A visual examination with palpation was made for different pathological affections. The portal lymph nodes, large bile ducts and gall bladder also were incised and inspected.

 

Histopathological examinations

All affected livers were collected, weighted and imaged by digital camera. Specimens from different lesions of liver were fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin, then washed, dehydrated, cleared and embedded in paraffin. Preparation of tissue for histopathological examination was carried out according to the method described by Bancroft et al. (1996). The paraffin embedded blocks were sectioned at 4-5 μm thickness, stained with hematoxylin and eosin and examined for the histological changes using digital microscope (Olympus BX50, Japan) and histological findings were recorded.

 

Estimation of economic loss

Direct economic loss was resulted from condemnation of affected liver was calculated using the following parameters; average weight of liver, and monthly liver price per kg (75 Egyptian Pound as the average retail price of edible organs per kilogram in Abu Simbel city). Average monthly economic loss was estimated by multiplying the number of condemned livers times the average liver weight and the monthly selling price. The sum of monthly values resulted in the total economic losses.

 

Statistical analysis

Statistical analysis was conducted using SPSS v.25.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA). The prevalence of different pathological conditions causing liver condemnation and confidence intervals were obtained, and the prevalence differences between the four seasons when the animal was slaughtered were also tested by chi-square with P value ≤ 0.05.

 

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

 

Slaughterhouses provide useful epidemiological data to verify the presence of diseases of economic concern and warn of potential threats to public health (Khan et al., 2017). So, for cattle slaughtered, liver condemned and economic loss, the study was a retrospective abattoir survey, performed for a period of one full year from 22 December 2018 to 21 December 2019. During this period, a total of 81452 male cattle was slaughtered and inspected. Based on seasons, 16294 (20%), 26968 (33%), 26556 (33%) and 11634 (14%) male cattle were slaughtered in winter, spring, summer, and autumn, respectively (Table 1).

 

Table 1: Absolute numbers and percentages of condemned liver in Abu-Simbel Abattoir during four seasons.

 

Season Slaughter animal Total condemned liver Total condemned liver for fascioliasis
No. No. % No. %
Winter 16294 1841 11.29 1431 8.78
Spring 26968 2203 8.17 1959 7.26
Summer 26556 2386 8.98 2111 7.94
Autumn 11634 1123 9.65 1015 8.72
Total seasons 81452 7553 9.27 6516 7.99

 

A total of 7553 (9.27%) pathological findings in liver were reported in slaughtered animal at Abu Simbel abattoirs. The frequency percentage of liver lesions during winter, spring, summer, and autumn were 24%, 29%, 32%, and15%, respectively (Figure 1). Whereas the pathological conditions causing live condemnation in this study were Fascioliasis 6516 (86.3), liver Cirrhosis 657 (8.7), liver Abscess 175 (2.3), Hepatitis 46 (0.6), Calcified cyst 112 (1.5), and C. bovis 47 (0.6) as showed in Table 2 and Figure 2.

 

Table 2: Prevalence distribution of different causes of liver condemnation and losses during four seasons.

 

Season Liver lesions Pathological lesions of cattle liver

Fascioliasis Abscess Cirrhosis Hepatitis Calcified cyst C. bovis
No. No. % No. % No. % No. % No. % No. %
Winter 1841 1431 77.7 101 5.5 117 6.4 46 0.6 99 5.4 47 0.6
Spring 2203 1959 88.9 0 0 231 10.5 0 0 13 0.6 0 0
Summer 2386 2111 88.5 74 3.1 201 8.4 0 0 0 0 0 0
Autumn 1123 1015 90.4 0 0 108 9.6 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total 7553 6516 86.3 175 2.3 657 8.7 46 0.6 112 1.5 47 0.6

 

 

 

Table 3: Estimated economic losses (USD) associated with liver condemnation.

 

Seasons Liver lesions Price Liver fascioliasis Price
No. Weight (Kg) $ No. Weight (Kg) $
Winter 1841 9205 43148.4 1431 7155 33539
Spring 2203 11015 51632.8 1959 9795 45914
Summer 2386 11190 52453 2111 10555 49476
Autumn 1123 5615 26320 1015 5075 23789
Total 7553 37025 173554.2 6516 32580 152718


Considering that each liver weighed 5.33 kg on average, and that a value of USD 4.69(LE 75) was assigned per kg; the total economic losses in USD were 173554.21$ whereas the economic losses due to Fascioliasis were 152718 $ as showed in Table 3.

 

Fascioliasis represented the most common pathological lesion of the condemned livers. Gross examination of cross sectioned condemned livers with Fascioliasis revealed the presence of Fasciola helminth in the bile ducts which appeared enlarged with thickened and fibrosed wall (Figure 3a), together with whitish foci on the surface of the liver with size varied from 0.5 to 1.5 cm in diameter (Figure 3b).

 

 

Histopathological examination of the condemned livers recorded fascioliasis as the most pathological lesions which appeared in the bile ducts (Figure 4a) with a subsequent biliary cirrhosis which represented by hyperplastic bile ducts, newly formed bile ductules, fibrous connective tissue proliferations, and mononuclear cells infiltrations (Figure 4b). Different minimal other histopathological lesions were also recorded including inflammatory reactions, cirrhosis (Figure 4c), degeneration and necrosis (Figure 4d).

 

The result revealed that the bovine fascioliasis is a problem in cattle slaughtered at Abu Simbel abattoirs causing high economic loss due to liver condemnation and carcass weight reduction; Which confirms that the bovine fasciolosis is economically important and widely distributed disease (Nyirenda et al., 2019).

 


 

With respect to the source of slaughtered cattle; Sudan has a higher prevalence of Bovine fascioliasis (Ochi and Elmalik, 2013), which attributed to many causes including lack of veterinary service in addition to presence of swampy areas for survival of the potential vector snails for Fasciola (Chakiso et al., 2014). In addition to the economic importance Fascioliasis has great role as re-emerging and widespread zoonotic problem affecting a number of human populations as a waterborne and foodborne zoonotic disease (Nyindo and Lukambagire, 2015).

 

Elsewhere, numerous surveys on the prevalence of fascioliasis in slaughtered animals have been reported but there are variety of prevalence rate between different countries as result of different climatic conditions and presence of suitable habitat for intermediate host of Fasciola spp. such as boggy and humid pasture, and high herd density (Novobilský et al., 2015) in northern Ethiopia,

 

The prevalence rates of Fascioliasis were 33.42%, 41.22% and 90.65% as estimated from qualitative coproscopy, egg-shedding index and abattoir survey data, respectively (Yimam et al., 2000). While in the southern part of Ethiopia the autopsy study indicates prevalence, rate was of (14.0%) (Abunna et al., 2010), Of the total 600 livers examined in Addis Ababa abattoir, Ethiopia 20.3% (122/600) were found infested with Fasciola (Aragaw and Sheferaw, 2012). In Egypt abattoirs the prevalence of Fascioliasis was 2.67% (Borai et al., 2013), also the overall prevalence of fascioliasis in the Nile Delta region of Egypt was 9.77% (El-tahawy et al., 2017).

 

The result of this work clearly helped to determine the importance of meat inspection in determination of disease situation and detect possible long term trends of the diseases (Badreldeen and Elfadil, 2015).

 

CONCLUSION

 

Fascioliasis considered to be the most common cause of liver condemnation and was responsible for total liver condemnation in imported cattle in Abu Simbel abattoir; it also should know that this result can help in clarification of the critical role of liver inspection records, especially for Fasciola spp. which are economically and zoonotic important disease of animal and human. Also, it can help in controlling of these diseases for improving animal health, prevention of disease and reduction of economic losses by liver condemnations.

 

Acknowledgment

 

Authors are thankful to Dr. Wafaa Ahmed Ali Mahmoud, Manger, Assuit Quarantine and all the team at Abu Simbel governorate slaughterhouses in Aswan for supporting this work.

 

Authors Contribution

 

Amer MA Rassol carried out the practical work of the study, Sahar HA Hekal prepared the manuscript. Sherein S. Abdelgayed carried out the histopathological examination. Ali M. Ahmed and Hassan M. Sobhy, took part in preparing and critical checking of this manuscript

 

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

 

The authors have declared no conflict of interest.

 

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