Litcius/Paper detail

Immunodiagnosis of Fascioliasis in Ruminants by ELISA Method: A Mini-Review

Nur Hafizah Sudirman, Noor Izani Noor Jamil, Ahmad Najib Mohamad, Wan‐Nor‐Amilah Wan Abdul Wahab

2023Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

spp. eggs or recovery of flukes in infected livers. Coprological analysis is unreliable in the patent period of chronic infection, and even then, its sensitivity is relatively low. Robust diagnostic tools that can promptly and accurately detect an active infection are crucial to avoid complications and further losses in ruminant livestock productivity, as well as to preserve the livelihood of communities at risk. Immunodiagnosis determined by antibody and antigen detection in the sera and faeces of infected ruminants provides a valuable alternative to the parasitological diagnostic approach. This review discusses current developments in immunological techniques by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in the detection of ruminant fascioliasis and summarises the performance of various ELISAs in studies conducted to date. Indirect ELISAs demonstrated effective immunodiagnostic performance with high sensitivities and specificities. Cathepsin L ELISA is the most favourable antigen in serodiagnosis, among other recombinant and native proteins evaluated. Sandwich ELISA provides excellent sensitivity and specificity, which correlates well with the fluke burden. Utilising monoclonal antibodies in sandwich ELISA reduces the detection time and performance variations that commonly occur in polyclonal antibody ELISA.

Topics & Concepts

FasciolaBiologyVeterinary medicineLivestockPolyclonal antibodiesAntibodySerologyImmunologyGold standard (test)VirologyHelminthsMedicineFasciola hepaticaEcologyInternal medicineHelminth infection and controlCoccidia and coccidiosis researchParasite Biology and Host Interactions