Mycoplasma gallisepticum infection was diagnosed in a group of chukar partridges, pheasants, and peafowl based on serology and isolation techniques. The farm also had quail, chickens, and ducks. Clinical signs in growing birds consisted of foamy eyes, swollen infraorbital sinuses, respiratory distress, and death. Breeding birds experienced a severe drop in egg production. Histologically, the growing birds exhibited lymphoplasmacytic inflammation of the conjunctiva, sinus, and trachea. The most likely source of infection was either chickens, which had been introduced before the onset of clinical signs, or the chukar partridge breeders, which had been obtained at various hunting field trials.
Four hundred fifty day-old Hubbard broiler chicks were subdivided into 15 groups of 30 chicks each. Six groups of chicks received 0.5 ml of broth culture containing 5 x 10(6) colony-forming units (CFU) of Salmonella enteritidis (SE) phage types (PTs) 4, 8, and 23 by crop gavage. Similarly, six other groups received 0.5 ml containing 5 x 10(8) CFU of SE. One group was inoculated with 0.5 ml containing 5 x 10(6) CFU of Salmonella pullorum, and another group received 0.5 ml containing 5 x 10(8) CFU of S. pullorum. A group of 30 chicks were kept as uninoculated controls. Chicks were observed daily for clinical signs and mortality. All birds were weighed at 7, 14, and 21 days postinoculation 21 (DPI). Four chicks were randomly selected from each treatment group, euthanatized, and necropsied at 7 and 14 DPI. Gross lesions were recorded and selected tissues were collected for histopathology. The higher rates of illness and mortality were observed in chicks inoculated with 5 x 10(6) and 5 x 10(8) CFU of S. pullorum, followed by SE PT4 of human origin and SE PT4 of chicken origin. Moderate to high mortality was observed in chicks inoculated with the higher dose of SE isolates that belonged to PT8 and one SE of PT23. Variable mortality was evident in groups inoculated with the lower dose of salmonella. The most consistent gross and histopathologic changes, including fibrinous pericarditis and perihepatitis, were seen in the dead birds from various treatment groups. The lower mean body weights were present in all treatment groups compared with uninoculated controls. No illness or mortality was observed in uninoculated control groups.
A Campylobacter jejuni isolate obtained from a turkey liver, designated C101, and a C. jejuni isolate obtained from the feces of a chicken, designated C111, were used to inoculate their respective hosts. Isolate C101 depressed weight gain by 20% when inoculated into newly hatched poults or 4-day-old poults. It also caused death, hepatic necrosis, and generalized hemorrhages in turkey embryos. The chicken-derived isolate, C111, did not reduce weight gain in newly hatched chicks, but it did induce mortality in chicken embryos. The supernatant of the cultures of both C. jejuni isolates also caused mortality in embryos.
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