Infectious bursal disease (IBD), caused by IBD virus (IBDV), is highly contagious, immunosuppressive and causes a negative economic impact on poultry industry. IBDVvaccinated broiler farms at south Kyushu, Japan had a bursa-to-bodyweight ratio (BB ratio) reduction at 28 days (d) old, followed by high mortality 30 d later. We analysed the influence of the IBDV on atrophy of the bursa of fabricius (BF) and the subsequent mortality after 30 d. Ten broilers were sampled at each timepoint from the farm with high mortality at 21, 25, 28 and 35 d. A second flock from the same farm was sampled at 14, 21, 25, 28, 35 and 42 d. IBDV was detected in BF samples at 25, 28 and 35 d and at 21, 25, 28 and 35 d in the first and second flocks, respectively, using immunohistochemical staining and RT-PCR. IBDV isolates from both flocks were closely related to the China KM523643 strain. Histopathology and TUNEL assay indicated apoptosis, severe lymphoid depletion, vacuoles within follicles, lymphoid follicle atrophy and fibrosis in the BF. We observed 75% of the polyserositis and 10% of the airsacculitis at 30 D in dead broilers. The antigenic variant IBDV infection was appeared to be the main influencing factor on BF atrophy and BB ratio reduction in the broilers. High mortality in the broilers after 30 d could be due to secondary infection. The disease caused by IBDV had a negative economic impact in the farm. RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS. New variant IBDV caused bursa atrophy and reduced BB ratio in 28-day-old broilers.. After vIBDV had infected broilers, at 21 days old they became immunosuppressed.. High mortality at 30 days old in broilers was due to secondary infection.. New vIBDV has a negative economic impact on broiler farms in Japan.
Porcine epidemic diarrhoea virus (PEDV) is a highly contagious causative agent of porcine epidemic diarrhoea (Niederwerder et al., 2016), which is an acute enteritis disease characterized by vomiting, diarrhoea and dehydration that causes as much as 100% mortality in neonatal piglets (Sun et al., 2012). PEDV was first discovered in Europe in the 1970s (Pensaert & de Bouck, 1978). Since the 1980s, PED has become widespread in multiple swine-producing countries in Europe and Asia (Lin, Saif, Marthaler, & Wang, 2016). In late 2010, new PEDV strains causing severe outbreaks with high morbidity (80%-100%) and mortality among sucking piglets (50%-100%) were reported in China (Li et al., 2012). These highly virulent PEDV strains were subsequently reported and responsible for recent outbreaks in other Asian, North and South American, and European countries, leading to devastating economic losses (Choudhury,
Mycoplasma bovis, the most important primary pathogen in the family Mycoplasmataceae, causes pneumonia, arthritis, otitis media, and mastitis in cattle. Histopathologic pulmonary changes associated with M. bovis infection have been characterized as suppurative-to-caseonecrotic bronchopneumonia; infection in other organs has been reported in only a few studies that examined caseonecrotic endocarditis and suppurative meningitis. Granulomatous lesions associated with M. bovis infection have been reported only rarely. We studied the granulomatous inflammation associated with M. bovis infection in several organs of 21 Japanese Black cattle. M. bovis was detected by isolation and loop-mediated isothermal amplification methods; other bacteria were detected using culture on 5% blood sheep agar and a MALDI-TOF MS Biotyper. Tissues were examined by histopathology and by immunohistochemistry (IHC) using anti– M. bovis, anti-Iba1, anti-iNOS, and anti-CD204 antibodies. All 21 cases, which included 2 cases of meningitis-meningoencephalitis, 8 cases of endocarditis, and 11 cases of bronchopneumonia, had caseonecrotic granulomatous inflammation associated with M. bovis infection. The IHC for macrophages revealed a predominance of iNOS-labeled (M1) macrophages in the inner layer of the caseonecrotic granulomas associated with meningitis-meningoencephalitis, endocarditis, and bronchopneumonia in Japanese Black cattle naturally infected with M. bovis.
Investigation of the role of animals that have recovered and survived from African swine fever (ASF) in carrying the ASF virus is currently intense and ongoing. However, no clear definition of the carrier stage has been established. The aim of the present study was to establish criteria to elucidate a clear status of survival in naturally ASF-infected domestic pigs in Vietnam. Seroconversion from previous infection was confirmed by serological assay, and the absence of the viral genome in various organs was also assured by molecular analysis of a partial p72 gene. We recognized that histopathological evidence could benefit from further insights into the status and role of the surviving animals; therefore, we performed a histopathological study on four pigs from farms with a history of ASF outbreak. We found fibrotic changes in the reparative process as the main finding in all four pigs. Immunohistochemical detection of viral protein revealed an interesting result. Despite the negative result from viral genome detection, the p30 protein gave a positive signal in the tonsils, lung, and stomach. This raises the possibility of stress-induced viral reactivation in long-term survivors and the risk of further outbreaks from human handling of contaminated carcasses.
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