HAMDY, M. K. (University of Georgia, Athens), AND N. D. BARTON. Fate of Staphylococcus aureus in bruised tissue. Appl. Microbiol. 13:15-21. 1965.-This investigation was initiated to determine the fate and behavior of a virulent marker strain of Staphylococcus aureus (MS) injected intramuscularly into both control and traumatized tissues. Control tissues appeared to possess a clearing mechanism highly active against this organism, whereas bruised tissues stimulated and supported its growth. This stimulation may be due to the presence of extrastromal hemoglobin in the bruised areas. By use of the disc-sensitivity procedure, extrastromal hemoglobin was found to enhance the growth of S. aureus (MS) and this stimulation was linearly dependent on concentration in the range of 0.002 to 0.008 ,mole per disc. Physical and physiological factors affecting the fate of staphylococci in poultry tissues were studied. The results showed that the number of viable cells of S. aureus (MS) in the initial inoculum exerted little effect on the survival activity patterns of this organism in the traumatized tissues. Control tissues, however, only became infected when a suspension containing 1.34 X 109 cells of the marker strain was injected. Regardless of the concentration of cells of this test culture inoculated into bruised areas, the staphylococci did not increase in number above a log of 8.5 organisms per gram of tissue. The extent of both tissue damage and accumulation of blood and fluid seemed to play an important role in the fate of staphylococci in experimentally induced infection. A correlation was noted between the severity of the bruise and the rate of growth and multiplication of virulent staphylococci in the tissue. The rate of growth showed a 100-fold increase in 1 day in the severe bruise, in 2 days in the medium bruise, and in 3 days in the superficial bruise. Time-course studies revealed that virulent S. aureus (MS) was able to persist in bruised tissue for long periods of time (18 days) even in the absence of noticeable infection. Therefore, it is believed that bruised tissue is a source of contamination to other birds and a health hazard to man.
HAMDY, M. K. (University of Georgia, Athens), N. D. BAR-TON, AND W. E. BROWN. Source and portal of entry of bacteria found in bruised poultry tissue. Appl. Microbiol. 12:464-469. 1964.-Bacteriological studies revealed that normal tissue, air sacs, feathers, skin of birds, poultry feed, gut, and chicken droppings were sources of the predominant organisms, including staphylococci, found in bruised poultry tissue. Further investigation of normal tissue revealed that after the intramuscular injection of Staphylococcus aureus, marker strain (MS), the organism was eliminated from these tissues within 7 days. However, when these tissues were traumatized 3 days after injection, the number of the test organism increased, and the organism was present on the 7th day after inoculation. Poultry feed and fecal material contained a large number of staphylococci identical to those isolated from bruised tissue (McCarthy, Brown, and Hamdy, 1963), thereby implicating the gut as a possible portal of entry. When a pathogenic marker strain of S. aureus was established in the intestinal tract of chickens by administering an active culture of this organism either in their drinking water or by gavage, it was recovered from the traumatized tissue. The incidence of positive culture of S. aureus MS in these tissues correlated with age of bruise, reaching 22 to 33% immediately after contusion and at the early stages of healing (1 to 3 days post bruise) and decreasing thereafter from 11 to 0% on the 4th through 6th days after bruise infliction. The air sac was also found to be a site by which bacteria may enter the traumatized tissues, but to a limited extent.
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