Plant and veterinary disease diagnosis: a generic approach to the development of field tools for rapid decision making?

Rapid and accurate diagnostic tests make an important contribution to programmes to monitor and eradicate infectious diseases that impact animal and plant health. Using foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) and sudden oak death as examples, this review outlines recent progress to develop new field tools for detection of the infectious agents that cause high-impact livestock and plant diseases. The principal driver for this work is to develop tools that can be used locally to assist in decision making. Advances in this area have developed simple-to-use lateral-flow devices for the detection of FMD virus and the genus Phytophthora (including Phytophthora ramorum, the causal agent of sudden oak death and the related pathogen P. kernoviae), as well as new hardware platforms to allow PCR testing for these agents by non-specialists in the field. Although developed for different diseases, the user requirements for rapid diagnostic tools for FMD and sudden oak death share many similarities. Using generic solutions to these challenging problems, it is now possible to imagine a new paradigm for how the collection and testing of samples to monitor the spread of important livestock and plant diseases might be achieved.
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Publication
Contributors
King D P, Ferris N P, Tomlinson J A, Boonham N
Year
2010
Journal
Bulletin OEPP/EPPO Bulletin
Volume
40
Issue
1
Pages
34-39
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