Predictability by Somatic Cell Counts Related to Prevalence of Intrammary Infection Within Herds
Open Access
- 1 August 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Dairy Science Association in Journal of Dairy Science
- Vol. 65 (8) , 1535-1539
- https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(82)82378-3
Abstract
Somatic cells were counted and bacteria identified for milk samples from 719 lactating dairy cows in 12 commercial herds. These pooled data were used to look at the accuracy of alternative thresholds of somatic cell counts as indicators of intramammary infection. Sensitivity, specificity and predictability positive and negative at alternative cell count thresholds were calculated. There was an increase of incidence of infection associated with increased cell count. Raising the cell count threshold increased predictability positive and specificity and decreased sensitivity and predictability negative. Also, the effect of prevalence of infection on predictabilities was examined for the pooled data on sensitivity and specificity at a cell count threshold of 400,000 cells/ml. As prevalence of infection increased, predictability of a positive test result also increased, but predictability negative decreased. Differences in accuracy of somatic cell count as a predictor of infection at varying prevalences of infection suggest that test results should be interpreted for individual herds.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- USE OF TOTAL AND DIFFERENTIAL SOMATIC-CELL COUNTS FROM COMPOSITE MILK SAMPLES TO DETECT MASTITIS IN INDIVIDUAL COWS1981
- EVALUATION OF TESTS1977
- NORMAL MILK SOMATIC CELL COUNTSJournal of Milk and Food Technology, 1972
- RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN LEUKOCYTE COUNTS IN BULK MILK AND APPARENT QUARTER INFECTIONS IN DAIRY HERDSJournal of Milk and Food Technology, 1971