AI Article Synopsis

  • Enteric infections from Chlamydia psittaci are common in ducks but usually don't show symptoms in the wild, prompting researchers to study its effects by orally infecting ducklings with a field strain.
  • In testing three different doses, they found that only ducklings given the highest dose displayed mild diarrhea, while others showed no significant clinical symptoms.
  • The study revealed that, despite widespread internal organ dissemination of the bacteria, the highest concentrations were found in specific organs like the spleen and liver, with contact birds eventually showing similar bacterial loads, indicating fast transmission between ducks.

Article Abstract

Enteric infections caused by Chlamydia (C.) psittaci are frequent in ducks, but mostly remain subclinical under field conditions. To emulate natural infection, we investigated the pathogenic potential of a C. psittaci field strain in orally inoculated 4-day-old ducklings. Three different challenge doses were tested and seven contact animals were also mock-inoculated with buffer in each group. Over the course of ten days, the birds were monitored for clinical symptoms and chlamydial dissemination before final examination of tissues using histopathology and immunohistochemistry. While the challenge strain disseminated systemically to all internal organs, mild signs of diarrhea were confined to ducklings inoculated with the highest dose (4.3 x 108 IFU/mL, Group 1). No other clinical symptoms or histopathological lesions were seen. The chlamydial load in internal organs as measured by PCR depended on the challenge dose and was unevenly distributed, i.e. high loads in spleen, liver, and distal small and large intestinal tract (ileum, cecum and rectum) vs. ten times lower values in lungs and proximal small intestinal tract (duodenum and jejunum). Notably, the C. psittaci infection of contact birds became evident on day 10 post-infection, with bacterial loads comparable to those of experimentally-infected animals, thus suggesting rapid bird-to-bird transmission of the challenge strain.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4864072PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0154860PLOS

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