Pasteurella multocida in scavenging family chickens and ducks: carrier status, age susceptibility and transmission between species

Pasteurella multocida causes fowl cholera, a highly contagious and severe disease in chickens and water fowls. The disease is not well described in less intensive production systems, including scavenging family poultry production in developing countries. P. multocida was isolated from 25.9% of healt...

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Veröffentlicht in:Avian pathology 2008-02, Vol.37 (1), p.51-57
Hauptverfasser: Mbuthia, P.G, Njagi, L.W, Nyaga, P.N, Bebora, L.C, Minga, U, Kamundia, J, Olsen, J.E
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 51
container_title Avian pathology
container_volume 37
creator Mbuthia, P.G
Njagi, L.W
Nyaga, P.N
Bebora, L.C
Minga, U
Kamundia, J
Olsen, J.E
description Pasteurella multocida causes fowl cholera, a highly contagious and severe disease in chickens and water fowls. The disease is not well described in less intensive production systems, including scavenging family poultry production in developing countries. P. multocida was isolated from 25.9% of healthy-looking ducks and 6.2% of chickens from free-range family poultry farms and at slaughter slabs at market. On experimental infection with 1.2 to 2.0×10 8 organisms of the P. multocida type strain (NCTC 10322 T ), 12-week-old chickens expressed fowl cholera clinical signs significantly more times (372 signs) than those of 4-week-old, 8-week-old and 16-week-old chickens (173, 272 and 187 signs) and more signs were severe. In family ducks the 8-week-old birds expressed clinical signs significantly more times (188 signs) than those of the other age groups (117, 80, and 83 signs, respectively) and severe signs were more frequent. P. multocida transmitted from seeder birds (n=12) to sentinel birds (n=30), which developed clinical signs, and in some cases lesions of fowl cholera allowed bacterial re-isolation, whether infected ducks served as seeders for chickens or chickens served as seeder for ducks. This study has documented the occurrence of P. multocida among healthy-appearing family poultry in a tropical setting, and demonstrated that age susceptibility is highest in 12-week-old family chickens and 8-week-old family ducks when challenged with a low-virulent strain of P. multocida. It has further demonstrated that cross-transmission of fowl cholera may happen between family ducks and chickens, and vice versa.
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The disease is not well described in less intensive production systems, including scavenging family poultry production in developing countries. P. multocida was isolated from 25.9% of healthy-looking ducks and 6.2% of chickens from free-range family poultry farms and at slaughter slabs at market. On experimental infection with 1.2 to 2.0×10 8 organisms of the P. multocida type strain (NCTC 10322 T ), 12-week-old chickens expressed fowl cholera clinical signs significantly more times (372 signs) than those of 4-week-old, 8-week-old and 16-week-old chickens (173, 272 and 187 signs) and more signs were severe. In family ducks the 8-week-old birds expressed clinical signs significantly more times (188 signs) than those of the other age groups (117, 80, and 83 signs, respectively) and severe signs were more frequent. P. multocida transmitted from seeder birds (n=12) to sentinel birds (n=30), which developed clinical signs, and in some cases lesions of fowl cholera allowed bacterial re-isolation, whether infected ducks served as seeders for chickens or chickens served as seeder for ducks. This study has documented the occurrence of P. multocida among healthy-appearing family poultry in a tropical setting, and demonstrated that age susceptibility is highest in 12-week-old family chickens and 8-week-old family ducks when challenged with a low-virulent strain of P. multocida. 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The disease is not well described in less intensive production systems, including scavenging family poultry production in developing countries. P. multocida was isolated from 25.9% of healthy-looking ducks and 6.2% of chickens from free-range family poultry farms and at slaughter slabs at market. On experimental infection with 1.2 to 2.0×10 8 organisms of the P. multocida type strain (NCTC 10322 T ), 12-week-old chickens expressed fowl cholera clinical signs significantly more times (372 signs) than those of 4-week-old, 8-week-old and 16-week-old chickens (173, 272 and 187 signs) and more signs were severe. In family ducks the 8-week-old birds expressed clinical signs significantly more times (188 signs) than those of the other age groups (117, 80, and 83 signs, respectively) and severe signs were more frequent. P. multocida transmitted from seeder birds (n=12) to sentinel birds (n=30), which developed clinical signs, and in some cases lesions of fowl cholera allowed bacterial re-isolation, whether infected ducks served as seeders for chickens or chickens served as seeder for ducks. This study has documented the occurrence of P. multocida among healthy-appearing family poultry in a tropical setting, and demonstrated that age susceptibility is highest in 12-week-old family chickens and 8-week-old family ducks when challenged with a low-virulent strain of P. multocida. It has further demonstrated that cross-transmission of fowl cholera may happen between family ducks and chickens, and vice versa.</abstract><cop>England</cop><pub>Taylor &amp; Francis Group</pub><pmid>18202950</pmid><doi>10.1080/03079450701784891</doi><tpages>7</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; IngentaConnect Free/Open Access Journals
subjects Aging - physiology
animal age
Animal Husbandry
animal pathogenic bacteria
Animals
Bacteria
carrier state
Carrier State - microbiology
Carrier State - transmission
Carrier State - veterinary
chickens
Chickens - microbiology
Cholera
Developing countries
disease severity
Disease transmission
ducks
Ducks - microbiology
food animals
fowl cholera
free range husbandry
LDCs
Pasteurella Infections - epidemiology
Pasteurella Infections - microbiology
Pasteurella Infections - transmission
Pasteurella Infections - veterinary
Pasteurella multocida
Pasteurella multocida - isolation & purification
pathogen shedding
Poultry
Poultry Diseases - epidemiology
Poultry Diseases - microbiology
Poultry Diseases - transmission
sentinel animals
signs and symptoms (animals and humans)
small-scale farming
Studies
virulence
title Pasteurella multocida in scavenging family chickens and ducks: carrier status, age susceptibility and transmission between species
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