Hemorrhagic hepatopathy is a syndrome reported in layer pullets resulting in mortality and lesions including hepatic, splenic, and intestinal necrosis; hepatic and splenic enlargement; hemorrhages; amyloidosis of the muscle, spleen, and liver; accumulation of noncoagulated hemorrhagic fluid in the coelom; and frequently, granulomatous myositis at bacterin injection sites. The syndrome is characterized in the literature in table egg layer pullets and is thought to be associated with the administration of bacterin vaccines, namely, frequently subsp. bacterins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSalmonella enterica subspecies arizonae (subspecies IIIa) is most frequently associated with reptiles but is also a bacterial pathogen of poultry, primarily of young turkeys where it induces septicemia, neurologic signs, and increased mortality. Arizonosis clinical cases in broiler chickens have recently been documented in the United States, driving the development of a rapid, molecular-based diagnostic for this subspecies. S.
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