Abstract. An unidentified, pleomorphic, gram-negative rod (PGNR) bacterium has been isolated from domestic fowl with respiratory disease. The PGNR was isolated in 5% of turkey accessions and 3% of chicken accessions, primarily from the respiratory tract. Preliminary characterization of this organism included reviewing accession records, conducting cultural and biochemical tests, and analyzing cellular fatty acids. The PGNR was also compared with other bacteria capable of inhabiting the avian respiratory system. Biochemical and cellular fatty acid analysis failed to identify the organism, however all 14 isolates were similar.Respiratory disease has been and continues to be a significant problem for the poultry industry. The large number of primary and secondary agents involved in respiratory disease, including viral, bacterial, mycotic, and parasitic agents, contributes to its complexity. The avian diagnostician is responsible for compiling information from a variety of sources and disciplines and for correlating the respiratory disease with an etiology. The significance of many secondary agents is often uncertain. A pleomorphic gram-negative rod-shaped bacterium is isolated with some frequency from fowl with respiratory disease at California Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory System (CVDLS) laboratories. This report is a preliminary characterization of this unidentified bacterium. Materials and methodsCase material. Accessions were submitted to the Fresno and Turlock Branch Laboratories of the CVDLS from July 1, 1990 to July 1, 1991. Accessions consisted of one or more birds submitted for a standard necropsy, including a bacteriologic workup.Necropsy procedures. A complete necropsy was performed on bird(s) from each accession. Tissues were plated onto 5% sheep blood agar (BA) and MacConkey agar plates and incubated at 37 C in 7.0% CO 2 . When indicated, cultures for mycoplasma were performed. Significance of bacterial isolates was determined based on quality of tissues, quantity and quality of bacterial growth, and consideration of the Received for publication February 27, 1992. clinical history. Significant isolates from each case were harvested after 18 hr of growth, mixed with 20% skim milk, and stored at -70 C. Bacterial strains. Pleomorphic gram-negative rods (PGNRs) were initially identified from necropsy cases based on growth on BA plates, no growth on MacConkey agar plates, Gram's stain reaction and morphology, positive oxidase test, positive ß-galactosidase (ONPG) test, and negative catalase test. Detailed characterization was performed on 14 stored isolates of the PGNR, 1 field isolate of Actinobacillus salpingitidis (obtained from R. Walker, CVDLS), and 6 American Type Culture Collection strains of bacteria encountered in the avian respiratory system (Bordetella avium, Haemophilus paragallinarum, Moraxella anatipestlfer, Pasteurella gallinarum, P. avium, and P. langaa).Cultural characterization of isolates. Standard methods of cultural and biochemical examination were used: 2 Gram's stain reaction, g...
An outbreak of diarrhea and neurological disease in California racing pigeons caused by avian paramyxovirus type 1 (PMV-1) is documented. Predominant clinical signs were polydipsia, ataxia, poor balance, torticollis, head tremors, inability to fly, and diarrhea that was unresponsive to therapy. Gross pathologic findings were often unremarkable or non-specific. The predominant histologic lesions were interstitial nephritis, chronic tubular necrosis, lymphoplasmacytic infiltration within the kidney, liver, and pancreas, and focal non-suppurative encephalitis. Pigeons from 20 submissions demonstrated characteristic clinical signs of PMV-1 infection. Pigeons from 17 submissions exhibited typical histopathology. Serologic evidence of PMV-1 infection was present in pigeons from 13 submissions, and PMV-1 was isolated from pigeons received in six submissions. None of these pigeons had been vaccinated against PMV-1.
Two cases of infectious coryza in meat chickens are reported. The first case involved 6-week-old broiler chickens in which only Haemophilus paragallinarum was isolated. The second case involved 11-week-old roaster chickens in which H. paragallinarum and Mycoplasma synoviae were isolated. Both farms were in close proximity to layer-chicken farms where infectious coryza had been previously diagnosed. In both cases, only certain houses on the farm were affected, and mortality in these houses increased slightly. At processing, the condemnation rates for affected houses were considerably higher than rates for unaffected houses. Condemnations for affected houses were mostly due to airsacculitis. A dissecting fibronopurulent cellulitis was a prominent lesion in the second case. This lesion could lead to confusion with chronic fowl cholera and swollen-head syndrome.
A disease outbreak characterized by respiratory signs, occasional neurologic signs, and increased mortality in commercial meat turkeys from four separate companies in central California was investigated in the late summer and early fall of 1986. The disease syndrome affected turkeys from 6 to 15 weeks of age and caused a severe fibrinous pericarditis, perihepatitis, and airsacculitis. Bacteriologic and serologic examinations as well as virus- and chlamydia-isolation attempts initially failed to implicate an etiologic agent. Eventually culture attempts were made in a 5% CO2 incubator, resulting in isolation of Pasteurella anatipestifer. The disease syndrome was reproduced in young turkeys and broiler chicks inoculated with the organism.
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