Nontyphoidal Salmonella strains are important reservoirs of antimicrobial resistance. An important issue that has not been investigated is whether the multiresistant Salmonella strains are more virulent than their susceptible counterparts. Salmonella isolates collected from clinical human (n=888) and porcine (n=2,120) cases at the same time period and geographic location were investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA cutaneous mycosis caused by Candida albicans that involved the combs and less frequently the wattles, facial skin, ear lobes, and neck of male broiler breeders is described. Roosters were 35 wk old and housed with hens in two conventional broiler breeder houses on a farm in western North Carolina. Morbidity was approximately 10% in one house and less than 2% in the other house.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClostridium difficile is widely known as a cause of disease in humans, and has emerged as an important problem in neonatal swine. No commercial product is available for immunoprophylaxis of C. difficile-associated disease, but success in preventing experimental infections in hamsters by use of nontoxigenic strains to competitively exclude toxigenic strains led us to try this method in neonatal pigs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPCR ribotypes were obtained for 144 Clostridium difficile isolates from neonatal pigs. Porcine isolates comprised four PCR ribotypes, but one, ribotype 078, predominated (83%). This was also the most common ribotype (94%) among 33 calf isolates but was rarely identified in other species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEdema disease is a systemic disease of weaned pigs caused by host-adapted strains of Escherichia coli, most commonly belonging to serogroup O138, O139, or O141. In the late 1990s, E. coli O147 strains containing the virulence genes f18, sta, stb, and stx(2) were recovered from outbreaks of edema disease in the United States.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of eight antimicrobial agents was determined by the agar dilution method for 80 isolates of Clostridium difficile from neonatal pigs with enteritis. MICs(50) for erythromycin, tilmicosin, and tylosin were relatively low (0.25-0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vet Diagn Invest
September 2003
A 12-month-old Angus bull calf with a history of fever and lethargy of several weeks' duration was necropsied. Macroscopic findings included general dehydration, congestion, and edema within the craniodorsal lobes of the lung, multifocal ecchymotic hemorrhages on the dorsal epaxial and gluteal muscles, bloody ingesta within the gastrointestinal tract, and a 4- x 4- x 5-cm irregular plaque located on the right atrioventricular heart valve. Microscopically, there were focally extensive pulmonary alveolar infiltrates of histiocytes and neutrophils, large numbers of necrotic hypereosinophilic hepatocytes located within the centrilobular and midzonal regions of the liver, and, within the plaque from the right atrioventricular valve, a large mass formed by abundant laminated fibrin that contained numerous small multifocal aggregates of gram-positive cocci.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA commercially available 1-hour enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for detecting the presence of Clostridium difficile toxins A and B was evaluated for use in diagnosis of C. difficile infections in neonatal swine. This test was compared with a tissue culture cytotoxicity assay, which is considered to be the reference standard for the detection of C.
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