Specific-pathogen-free white leghorn chicks concomitantly infected with both infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) and reovirus (WVU-2937) on day 1 had significantly lower (P less than 0.05) virus-neutralizing- and precipitating-antibody geometric mean titers (GMT) to reovirus than chicks infected with only reovirus on day 1 but had a similar incidence of inflammation of the metatarsal digital flexor tendons. Chicks infected with IBDV on day 7 and reovirus on day 14 had a greater incidence of inflammation of the tarsometatarsal digital flexor tendons and lower neutralizing- and precipitating-antibody GMT to reovirus than chicks infected with only reovirus on day 14. Chicks infected with both viruses on day 1 had a significantly lower (P less than 0.05) neutralizing-antibody GMT to IBDV than chicks infected with only IBDV.
The immunocompetence of 8-week-old reovirus WVU 2937-infected and uninfected chickens fed various dietary levels of biotin, niacin, choline, or folic acid was evaluated in four experiments. Antibody production to sheep red blood cells (SRBC), wattle responses to phytohemagglutinin-P (PHA-P), and wattle responses of tuberculin-sensitized chickens to bovine-purified protein derivative (PPD) were examined in five chickens per treatment. Dietary deficiencies had no effect on the in vivo T-cell immune responses to PPD, PHA-P, or humoral hemagglutinating-antibody production to SRBC. Reovirus-infected and uninfected chickens fed biotin at double the National Research Council (1977) requirement demonstrated decreased PPD responses. Lower hemagglutinating-antibody titers in the uninfected chickens and increased titers in the infected chickens were observed in those fed 200% of the requirement of biotin when compared with the chickens fed 20% and 100% biotin diets. Reovirus infection had no effect on PPD and PHA-P responses. However, in the choline experiment, reovirus-infected chickens had elevated titers. These data indicate that reovirus infection had no adverse effect on the immunocompetence of chickens 8 weeks postinfection. Dietary deficiencies also had no adverse effect on the immunocompetence of 8-week-old reovirus-infected and uninfected chickens.
Five experiments were conducted to determine the incidence and severity of tenosynovitis in tendons distal to the tarsal joint in 4-, 6-, and 8-week-old reovirus WVU 2937-infected chickens fed diets containing 20%, 100%, or 200% of the 1977 National Research Council nutrient requirements (NCR-77) of manganese, biotin, niacin, choline, or folic acid. Male chickens, but not female chickens, fed 20% or 100% or the NRC-77 level of folic acid had consistently higher lesion scores of tenosynovitis than male chickens fed the 200% NRC-77 level of folic acid. Increasing dietary manganese levels from 20% to 200% NRC-77 reduced the severity of tendon swelling in 6- and 8-week-old male chickens and appeared to increase the severity of tendon swelling in 8-week-old female chickens. Male chickens fed 20% of the NRC-77 required level of biotin had numerically more severe tenosynovitis at 6 weeks of age and significantly more severe tenosynovitis at 8 weeks of age than male chickens fed 100% and 200% of the NRC-77 level of biotin. Increasing dietary choline levels from 20% to 200% of the NCR-77 required level increased the severity of tenosynovitis numerically at 6 weeks of age and significantly at 8 weeks of age. When data were pooled across diet, male chickens had significantly more severe tenosynovitis than female chickens at 4, 6, and 8 weeks of age in the choline experiment and at 4 and 6 weeks of age in the folic acid experiment. Differences in the severity of tenosynovitis of individual treatment means (sex X diet X infection interaction means) occurred at only the 20% or 100% NRC-77 level of choline or folic acid. Male chickens also had more severe tenosynovitis than female chickens when fed 20% of the NRC-77 required level of manganese for 6 or 8 weeks.
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