Abstract |
In three replicate trials, chicks were treated orally with a culture of caecal contents from an adult hen and then exposed to continuous challenge from a strain of Salmonella kedougou incorporated in feed at a level of ca 10(2)/g. The contaminated feed was introduced at intervals from 0 to 48 h after treatment. Under these conditions, only one of 119 chicks in 12 separate groups was salmonella-positive at 7 d, compared with 36 of 119 controls, but thereafter protection was less consistent and in some cases the subsequent incidence of infected birds increased during the 3-week rearing period. At 21 d, 14 of 60 treated chicks were positive and 32 of 59 controls. Protection was more evident in chicks challenged 24 or 48 h after treatment than in those groups which received the salmonella-contaminated feed at 0 or 5 h and even untreated, control chicks showed greater resistance to salmonella infection from 24 h onwards. In some control and treated groups containing salmonella-positive birds, contamination of the litter reached ca 10(6) salmonellas/g, thus providing a considerable secondary challenge. Introduction of salmonellas via contaminated feed probably reduces the efficacy of protective treatment under field conditions and helps to explain the more limited success in commercial use.
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Authors | C S Impey, G C Mead, M Hinton |
Journal | The Journal of applied bacteriology
(J Appl Bacteriol)
Vol. 63
Issue 2
Pg. 139-46
(Aug 1987)
ISSN: 0021-8847 [Print] England |
PMID | 3654404
(Publication Type: Journal Article)
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Topics |
- Animal Feed
- Animals
- Antibiosis
- Cecum
(microbiology)
- Chickens
- Poultry Diseases
(microbiology, prevention & control)
- Salmonella
(growth & development)
- Salmonella Infections, Animal
(microbiology, prevention & control)
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