Weanling Rabbit Mortalities Caused by Enteropathogenic Bacteria: Bacteriological and Pathological Investigation

Samples of internal organs (liver, heart, spleen, kidney and intestinal contents) were aseptically collected from 120 freshly died newly weanling rabbits and subjected to isolation and identification of the causative bacterial pathogens. The causative pathogens were isolated and identified biochemic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fatma M. Mohamed, Abeer H.M. El Hendy, Mona A. El Shehedi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rabie Fayed 2019-04-01
Series:Journal of Applied Veterinary Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://javs.journals.ekb.eg/article_63464.html
id doaj-3aaaa18f3d35492e9bebd062843f55ea
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3aaaa18f3d35492e9bebd062843f55ea2021-03-27T09:09:03ZengRabie FayedJournal of Applied Veterinary Sciences1687-40722090-33082019-04-01411829https://dx.doi.org/10.21608/javs.2019.63464Weanling Rabbit Mortalities Caused by Enteropathogenic Bacteria: Bacteriological and Pathological InvestigationFatma M. Mohamed0Abeer H.M. El Hendy1Mona A. El Shehedi2Dept. of Poultry Diseases, Animal Health Research Institute, Regional Laboratory, Assiut, Egypt.Pathology Department, Animal Health Research Institute, Regional Laboratory, Assiut, Egypt.Serology Unit and Bacterial Strains Bank, Animal Health Research Institute, Dokki, Egypt.Samples of internal organs (liver, heart, spleen, kidney and intestinal contents) were aseptically collected from 120 freshly died newly weanling rabbits and subjected to isolation and identification of the causative bacterial pathogens. The causative pathogens were isolated and identified biochemically. E.coli and Salmonella (the major associated pathogens) were typed serologically and tested for antimicrobial agents. The bacterial infection prevalence rate was Escherichia coli (56.6%), Salmonella spp. (27.5%), Enterobacter spp. (7.5%), Citrobacter spp. (5%) and Proteus spp. (3.3%). Out of the 68 infections with E.coli, 30 were serotyped as O125 (ten), O127 (six), O128 (five), O86 (five) and untyped (four). Out of the 33 Salmonella infections, seven were serotyped as serovar S. goldcoast (four) and serovars S. magherafelt (three). E.coli serogroups were resistant to the majority of used antimicrobial and were sensitive only to Sulphamethazole. Both Salmonella serovars were sensitive to most antimicrobial used in this study but they were resistant to amoxicillin. Both infected rabbit groups with E.coli and Salmonella demonstrated obvious histopathological alterations in the intestine, liver and spleen. Both E.coli (O86) and Salmonella goldcoast were used for experimental infection of weanling rabbits (6-8 weeks). Five days post-infection and after observation of the clinical symptoms, animals were sacrificed and tissue samples from the intestine, liver, kidney and spleen were examined histopathologically. Utmost care must be taken around the time of weaning in rabbits.https://javs.journals.ekb.eg/article_63464.htmlantibiogramcitrobacter sppe.colimortalityrabbit
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fatma M. Mohamed
Abeer H.M. El Hendy
Mona A. El Shehedi
spellingShingle Fatma M. Mohamed
Abeer H.M. El Hendy
Mona A. El Shehedi
Weanling Rabbit Mortalities Caused by Enteropathogenic Bacteria: Bacteriological and Pathological Investigation
Journal of Applied Veterinary Sciences
antibiogram
citrobacter spp
e.coli
mortality
rabbit
author_facet Fatma M. Mohamed
Abeer H.M. El Hendy
Mona A. El Shehedi
author_sort Fatma M. Mohamed
title Weanling Rabbit Mortalities Caused by Enteropathogenic Bacteria: Bacteriological and Pathological Investigation
title_short Weanling Rabbit Mortalities Caused by Enteropathogenic Bacteria: Bacteriological and Pathological Investigation
title_full Weanling Rabbit Mortalities Caused by Enteropathogenic Bacteria: Bacteriological and Pathological Investigation
title_fullStr Weanling Rabbit Mortalities Caused by Enteropathogenic Bacteria: Bacteriological and Pathological Investigation
title_full_unstemmed Weanling Rabbit Mortalities Caused by Enteropathogenic Bacteria: Bacteriological and Pathological Investigation
title_sort weanling rabbit mortalities caused by enteropathogenic bacteria: bacteriological and pathological investigation
publisher Rabie Fayed
series Journal of Applied Veterinary Sciences
issn 1687-4072
2090-3308
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Samples of internal organs (liver, heart, spleen, kidney and intestinal contents) were aseptically collected from 120 freshly died newly weanling rabbits and subjected to isolation and identification of the causative bacterial pathogens. The causative pathogens were isolated and identified biochemically. E.coli and Salmonella (the major associated pathogens) were typed serologically and tested for antimicrobial agents. The bacterial infection prevalence rate was Escherichia coli (56.6%), Salmonella spp. (27.5%), Enterobacter spp. (7.5%), Citrobacter spp. (5%) and Proteus spp. (3.3%). Out of the 68 infections with E.coli, 30 were serotyped as O125 (ten), O127 (six), O128 (five), O86 (five) and untyped (four). Out of the 33 Salmonella infections, seven were serotyped as serovar S. goldcoast (four) and serovars S. magherafelt (three). E.coli serogroups were resistant to the majority of used antimicrobial and were sensitive only to Sulphamethazole. Both Salmonella serovars were sensitive to most antimicrobial used in this study but they were resistant to amoxicillin. Both infected rabbit groups with E.coli and Salmonella demonstrated obvious histopathological alterations in the intestine, liver and spleen. Both E.coli (O86) and Salmonella goldcoast were used for experimental infection of weanling rabbits (6-8 weeks). Five days post-infection and after observation of the clinical symptoms, animals were sacrificed and tissue samples from the intestine, liver, kidney and spleen were examined histopathologically. Utmost care must be taken around the time of weaning in rabbits.
topic antibiogram
citrobacter spp
e.coli
mortality
rabbit
url https://javs.journals.ekb.eg/article_63464.html
work_keys_str_mv AT fatmammohamed weanlingrabbitmortalitiescausedbyenteropathogenicbacteriabacteriologicalandpathologicalinvestigation
AT abeerhmelhendy weanlingrabbitmortalitiescausedbyenteropathogenicbacteriabacteriologicalandpathologicalinvestigation
AT monaaelshehedi weanlingrabbitmortalitiescausedbyenteropathogenicbacteriabacteriologicalandpathologicalinvestigation
_version_ 1724201147240022016