Journal
PAKISTAN VETERINARY JOURNAL
Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 576-579Publisher
UNIV AGRICULTURE, FAC VETERINARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.29261/pakvetj/2022.026
Keywords
Poultry contamination; Drug resistance; Microbial infections; Chicken carcass
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This study investigated the prevalence of Proteus mirabilis in poultry meat and its antimicrobial susceptibility. The results showed a high positivity rate of P. mirabilis in chicken carcass, and the isolates exhibited resistance to certain antibiotics. The study suggests that chicken meat could serve as a source of this pathogen and potentially infect humans and animals.
The present study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of Proteus mirabilis (P. mirabilis) in poultry meat and to find its antimicrobial susceptibility. P. mirabilis has been frequently isolated from poultry and poses potential threat to public health. The pathogen resides in broiler's intestine, so it can be a source of contamination of chicken carcass in a slaughterhouse. A total of 50 samples of chicken carcass (from liver n=15, from intestine n=15, from thigh n=11 and from wings n=9) were taken from Faisalabad and cultured on Xylose Lysine Deoxycholate agar (XLD) for isolation and purification of P. mirabilis. Percent positivity of P. mirabilis in liver was found to be 60%, 46% in intestine, 36% in thigh and 33% in wings. P. mirabilis isolates showed high resistance to tetracycline (100%) and piperacillin (91.3%) while low resistance was shown to ceftazidime (8.6%). The study concluded that chicken could be the source of P. mirabilis and it can be a source of infection in human and animals.
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