AI Article Synopsis

  • The anaerobic intestinal spirochaete was first identified in 2007, but no cases in pigs were reported until a severe outbreak occurred in southern Germany, affecting 60% of a fattening farm's finisher pigs with mucohaemorrhagic diarrhoea.
  • Diagnostic tests ruled out other common pathogens, and spirochaetes were confirmed in tissue samples, leading to successful culture from affected pigs.
  • The study highlights the potential risk of cross-species infection from birds to pigs due to outdoor farming practices and international trade, raising concerns for naive herds.

Article Abstract

The anaerobic intestinal spirochaete ) was first described in 2007 but since then no further isolates have been reported from pigs. Accordingly, when the species was validly published in 2016, the overall occurrence and clinical relevance in pigs were unknown. In a fattening farm in southern Germany, mucohaemorrhagic diarrhoea was observed in 60 per cent (750 animals) of the finisher pigs. A diagnostic workup including culture, culture, specific, -specific and -specific multiplex PCR and postmortem examination of severely affected pigs was performed. Tests for species, and were all negative. Gross and microscopic lesions were in agreement with dysentery and spirochaetes could be demonstrated by silver staining in tissue samples of the caecum at the ileal papilla. was cultured from faeces or colon of all (five) animals sampled and identified using -RFLP, partial -gene-sequencing and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). According to the initial report from Scandinavia, can be isolated from birds and cross-species infection could be demonstrated infecting pigs with an avian isolate. Thus outdoor production as in the case presented here and international trade may pose a risk for infection of naive herds.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/vr.104705DOI Listing

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