4.5 Article

Colibacillosis in caged layer hens: characteristics of the disease and the aetiological agent

Journal

AVIAN PATHOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages 117-125

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/03079450310001642149

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In Europe, outbreaks of acute mortality in layer flocks due to colisepticalemia have frequently been observed since the mid-1990s. The aims of this study were to describe the disease, to identify the serotypes of the avian pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) present in these outbreaks, and to detect the presence of F11 fimbriae and flagella in the isolates. For this purpose, 20 flocks with APEC-associated increased mortality and 20 control flocks matched for age were examined. Weekly mortality rates in the colibacillosis-affected flocks reached 1.71%, versus 0.30% in the control flocks. The maximum cumulative mortality over an entire colibacillosis outbreak reached 9.19%. The disease was often flock and hen house associated, with recurrent outbreaks within one round and in successive rounds in the same house. Disease was usually acute without clinical symptoms. Peritonitis with yolk material deposited in the peritoneal cavity and polyserositis were the main lesions at necropsy. O78 strains were isolated in 15 of the 20 colibacillosis flocks, and in only one of the control flocks. The majority of strains from the control flocks could not be serotyped by the 28 O-antisera used. In general, F11 fimbriae and flagella were present in the majority of the strains. F11 fimbriae were significantly more often found in O78 isolates than in the other serotypes, and are thus more often present in isolates from colibacillosis flocks. Strains positive for F11, and for F11 and flagella, were more frequently present in heart and liver of the colibacillosis-affected flocks.

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