Non-Antibiotics Strategies to Control Salmonella Infection in Poultry

spp. is a facultative intracellular pathogen causing localized or systemic infections, involving economic and public health significance, and remains the leading pathogen of food safety concern worldwide, with poultry being the primary transmission vector. Antibiotics have been the main strategy for...

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Veröffentlicht in:Animals (Basel) 2022-01, Vol.12 (1), p.102
Hauptverfasser: Ruvalcaba-Gómez, José Martín, Villagrán, Zuamí, Valdez-Alarcón, Juan José, Martínez-Núñez, Marcelino, Gomez-Godínez, Lorena Jacqueline, Ruesga-Gutiérrez, Edmundo, Anaya-Esparza, Luis Miguel, Arteaga-Garibay, Ramón Ignacio, Villarruel-López, Angélica
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:spp. is a facultative intracellular pathogen causing localized or systemic infections, involving economic and public health significance, and remains the leading pathogen of food safety concern worldwide, with poultry being the primary transmission vector. Antibiotics have been the main strategy for control for many years, which has allowed producers to improve the growth and health of food-producing animals. However, the utilization of antibiotics has been reconsidered since bacterial pathogens have established and shared a variety of antibiotic resistance mechanisms that can quickly increase within microbial communities. The use of alternatives to antibiotics has been recommended and successfully applied in many countries, leading to the core aim of this review, focused on (1) describing the importance of infection in poultry and the effects associated with the use of antibiotics for disease control; (2) discussing the use of feeding-based (prebiotics, probiotics, bacterial subproducts, phytobiotics) and non-feeding-based (bacteriophages, in ovo injection, vaccines) strategies in poultry production for control; and (3) exploring the use of complementary strategies, highlighting those based on -omics tools, to assess the effects of using the available antibiotic-free alternatives and their role in lowering dependency on the existing antimicrobial substances to manage bacterial infections in poultry effectively.
ISSN:2076-2615
2076-2615
DOI:10.3390/ani12010102