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43303

Bacterial pathogens associated with cellulitis in chickens

Article

Last updated: 04 Jan 2025

Subjects

-

Tags

Veterinary microbiology and pathobiology (Veterinary Bacteriology & my…irology, immunology, parasitology, pathology, and molecular biology).

Abstract

Cellulitis is a serious problem for the poultry industry because of increased
condemnations, carcass downgrading at processing, and higher labor costs to process
affected flocks. In the present study, the prevalence of cellulitis was studied in 240 broiler
chickens. The correlation between cellulitis and other systemic lesions of the same bird was
investigated also. Moreover, identification of the causative bacterial agents was conducted
focusing on E. coli and Salmonella isolates. The prevalence rate of cellulitis in examined
broiler chickens was 38.3%. Cellulitis without systemic lesion was observed in 14.2% of
birds while 24.2% of birds had cellulitis associated with other systemic lesions in the
internal organs while hepatitis was the most frequent. The bacteriological examination
revealed that of 253 samples collected, a total of 157 bacterial isolates were recovered
(62.1%). Among the recovered isolates, E. coli was the most prevalent (126 isolates; 80.3%)
as well as 4 Salmonella species (2.5%), 9 Proteus species (5.7%), 7 Pseudomonas
aeruginosa (4.5%), 3 Enterobacter species (1.9%) and 8 Staphylococcus aureus (5.1%).
Serogrouping of E. coli isolates revealed that O125 was the most prevalent; 32%, followed by
serogroups O158, O55, O78 as 24%, 12%, 10%, respectively, then both O1 and O8; 6% for
each, and finally O15; 4%. Antibiogram of E. coli isolates showed a high sensitivity against
enrofloxacin only (81%) while they were moderately sensitive to apramycin (65.9%) and
colistin sulphate (61.9%) as well as ciprofloxacin and cefotaxime sodium (56.3% and
55.6%, respectively). On the other hand, high moderate degrees of resistances were
observed against the other antimicrobials. Salmonella isolates showed complete sensitivities
to ciprofloxacin and enrofloxacin while they were completely resistant to most of
antimicrbials.

DOI

10.21608/jvmr.2018.43303

Keywords

bacterial pathogens, Cellulitis, chickens

Authors

First Name

Radwan

Last Name

I.A.

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Bacteriology, Mycology and Immunology Department, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Beni-Suef University, Egypt.

Email

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City

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Orcid

-

First Name

Abed

Last Name

A.H.

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Bacteriology, Mycology and Immunology Department, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Beni-Suef University, Egypt.

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Abd Allah

Last Name

M.M.

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Animal Health Research Institute Dokki, El Fayoum branch, Egyp

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Abd El-Latif

Last Name

M.A.A.

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Animal Health Research Institute Dokki, El Fayoum branch, Egypt.

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

25

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

6783

Issue Date

2018-06-01

Receive Date

2019-07-31

Publish Date

2018-06-01

Page Start

68

Page End

79

Print ISSN

2357-0512

Online ISSN

2357-0520

Link

https://jvmr.journals.ekb.eg/article_43303.html

Detail API

https://jvmr.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=43303

Order

6

Type

Original Article

Type Code

891

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Journal of Veterinary Medical Research

Publication Link

https://jvmr.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Bacterial pathogens associated with cellulitis in chickens

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023