Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Characteristics ofspp. from Chickens That Died Within One Week of Age in Commercial Farms of Integrated Broiler Operations in South Korea.
- Journal:
- Avian diseases
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Jung, Hye-Ri & Lee, Young Ju
- Affiliation:
- College of Veterinary Medicine & Institute for Veterinary Biomedical Science · South Korea
Abstract
Nontyphoidalspp. potentially lead to economic loss, thereby threatening the poultry industry; moreover, they are major pathogens that can cause human illness. In this study,were isolated from the internal organs of chickens that had died within one week of age in 132 commercial farms of five integrated broiler operations.were isolated from 35 (26.5%) farms, and the most frequently detected serovar wasserovar Enteritidis, detected in 19 (14.4%) farms, followed byserovars Typhimurium (4 farms, 3.0%),. Senftenberg (3 farms, 2.3%),. Agona (2 farms, 1.5%),. Montevideo (2 farms, 1.5%),. Infantis (2 farms, 1.5%),. Thompson (2 farms, 1.5%), and. Bareilly (1 farm, 0.8%) (< 0.05). In particular,. Enteritidis was identified on farms (4.5%-22.2%) of all five operations. The prevalence of resistance to nalidixic acid (97.7%-100%) was significantly higher than that of resistance to other antimicrobials (0.0%-44.4%) in all five operations (< 0.05), and the prevalence of multidrug resistance showed significant differences among the five integrated operations (< 0.05).. Enteritidis was divided into 18 pulsed-field gel electrophoresis pattern types; however, confirming the epidemiological relationship proved challenging. Moreover, 9 (14.5%) among 62. Enteritidis isolates harbored 2 kinds of β-lactamase genes,(2 isolates) and(7 isolates), and 4 (6.5%). Enteritidis isolates harbored 2 kinds of integrase genes: class 1 integron (2 isolates) and class 2 integron (2 isolates). Most of the 20 virulence genes tested were detected in more than 93.5% of. Enteritidis isolates, but theandgenes were only detected in 2 isolates (3.2%) and 1 isolate (1.6%), respectively. This study indicates that variousspp., including. Enteritidis and. Typhimurium, are persistent in commercial broiler farms via vertical or horizontal transmission.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40643933/