Infectious laryngotracheitis (ILT) can cause severe losses in backyard flocks (BYFs) and commercial poultry. The prevalence of ILT, the circulating strains of ILT virus (ILTV) in BYFs, and the correlation of disease in BYF and commercial operations, is largely unknown. Of 8,656 BYF submissions, 88 cases of ILT were diagnosed at the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System in 2007-2017. ILT diagnosis by year varied from 0.19% to 1.7% of the total BYF submissions, with the highest number of cases submitted from Amador and Riverside counties. Moderate tracheitis, conjunctivitis, and occluded tracheal lumen were commonly reported gross anatomic lesions. Microscopically, inflammation and edema were observed in the trachea, lung, and conjunctiva; 62 (70%) cases had intranuclear inclusion bodies (INIBs), with 10 cases containing INIBs only in conjunctival sections. To analyze the circulating ILTV strains and to differentiate between field and vaccine strains of ILTV, real-time PCR and sequencing of 996 base pairs of the infected-cell polypeptide 4 (ICP4) gene was performed on 15 ILTV-positive tracheal samples and compared to reference field and vaccine ILTV ICP4 sequences in GenBank. Fourteen strains were identical or closely related to the chicken embryo origin live virus vaccine strains, and one strain was closely related to a Chinese isolate, the USDA reference strain, and a vaccine strain. The presence of ILT in BYFs in counties with high commercial poultry concentrations demonstrates a risk for disease transmission and emphasizes the importance of continued surveillance and improved biosecurity in BYFs.
Pathogenic strains of infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) are associated with increased morbidity, mortality, and immunosuppression in susceptible chickens. Backyard poultry is increasing in popularity in the United States, but very little is known about the prevalence and molecular epidemiology of IBDV within these flocks. We performed a retrospective study and phylogenetic analyses of IBDV detected in backyard chickens (BYCs) submitted to the California Animal Health and Food Safety (CAHFS) diagnostic laboratory system in 2009–2017. There were 17 CAHFS autopsy cases of very virulent IBDV (vvIBDV) segment A detected by RT-rtPCR in BYC flocks from 7 counties in California from 2009–2017. During this same time period, non-vvIBDV genotypes were detected by RT-rtPCR in 16 autopsy cases originating from BYC premises in 10 counties in California. Subsequent RT-PCR and phylogenetic analysis of a segment of the hvVP2 and VP1 gene identified vvIBDV, interserotypic reassortant IBDV (vvIBDV segment A and serotype 2 segment B), and non-vvIBDV (variant/subclinical IBDV and classic IBDV) strains in BYC flocks in California.
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