Cecal spirochetosis associated with Serpulina pilosicoli in captive juvenile ring-necked pheasants

Spirochetes similar to those described in the ceca of broilers with diarrhea and in laying hens with decreased egg production and growth were identified in the ceca of captive-raised juvenile ring-necked pheasants (Phasianus colchicus). The birds were submitted for diagnostic investigation of an ill...

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Veröffentlicht in:Avian diseases 1997-10, Vol.41 (4), p.997-1002
Hauptverfasser: Webb, D.M. (Illinois Department of Agriculture, Galesburg, IL.), Duhamel, G.E, Mathiesen, M.R, Muniappa, N, White, A.K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Spirochetes similar to those described in the ceca of broilers with diarrhea and in laying hens with decreased egg production and growth were identified in the ceca of captive-raised juvenile ring-necked pheasants (Phasianus colchicus). The birds were submitted for diagnostic investigation of an illness characterized by a seromucoid ocular discharge, sneezing, swollen infraorbital sinuses, and weight loss. In addition to cecal spirochetosis, the birds had mild enteric coccidiosis, trichomoniasis, and nematodiasis (Heterakis spp.); esophageal capillariasis; and respiratory mycoplasmosis. Weakly beta-hemolytic spirochetes isolated from the ceca of one pheasant were identified as Serpulina pilosicoli with the use of a 16S tRNA sequence-specific polymerase chain reaction amplification assay. Diffuse cecal enterocyte attachment was reproduced in a 1-day-old chick challenged with the pheasant S. pilosicoli isolate. Immunohistochemical staining of sections of ceca from the pheasant and challenged chick with a Serpulina spp. flagellar antigen-specific monoclonal antibody confirmed spirochetal attachment to cecal enterocytes. The etiologic significance of the spirochete infection is unknown because respiratory signs and multiple gastroenteric pathogens dominated the clinicopathologic manifestations and an intestinal disorder was not a clinical complaint
ISSN:0005-2086
1938-4351
DOI:10.2307/1592360