SUBCLINICAL INFECTIOUS BURSAL DISEASE IN AN INTEGRATED BROILER PRODUCTION OPERATION

被引:16
作者
HOMER, BL
BUTCHER, GD
MILES, RD
ROSSI, AF
机构
[1] Department of Comparative and Experimental Pathology, University of Florida, Gainesville
[2] Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville
[3] Department of Poultry Science, University of Florida, Gainesville
关键词
D O I
10.1177/104063879200400406
中图分类号
S85 [动物医学(兽医学)];
学科分类号
0906 ;
摘要
A field study was designed to determine the prevalence of subclinical infectious bursal disease (IBD) in broiler chickens from a commercial poultry company. Bursae of Fabricius (BF) from two vaccinated and three nonvaccinated broiler flocks were evaluated histologically, and antibody profiles of these broiler and matched parent breeder flocks were established. Lesions of IBD, including lymphoid necrosis, stromal edema, and infiltrates of heterophils and macrophages, were first detected in BF at 24 days of age in both vaccinated and nonvaccinated chickens. At 41 days, all BF had lesions characteristic of IBD, including severe lymphoid depletion, proliferation of epithelial cells, and mild fibroplasia. Although mean maternal antibody levels (measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) in broilers were apparently protective through day 12, IBD antibodies decreased to nonprotective levels (below 1,000) by day 16 or 20. Titers began to increase by day 28 or 32 because of field exposure. Sentinel birds, placed with broiler flocks, also developed IBD antibody titers. Broiler breeders had low and nonuniform antibody titers. Prevalence of field IBD exposure was high, and existing vaccination programs were not effective.
引用
收藏
页码:406 / 411
页数:6
相关论文
共 20 条
[1]  
Baxendale W., Lutticken D., The results of field trials with an inactivated Gumboro vaccine, Dev Biol Stand, 51, pp. 211-219, (1981)
[2]  
Benton W.J., Cover M.S., Rosenberger J.K., Studies on the transmission of the infectious bursal agent (IBA) of chickens, Avian Dis, 11, pp. 430-438, (1967)
[3]  
Cheville N.F., Studies on the pathogenesis of Gumboro disease in the bursa of Fabricius, spleen, and thymus of the chicken, Am J Pathol, 51, pp. 527-551, (1967)
[4]  
Faragher J.T., Allan W.H., Wyeth P.J., Immunosuppressive effect of infectious bursal agent on vaccination against Newcastle disease, Vet Rec, 95, pp. 385-388, (1974)
[5]  
Goryo M., Suwa T., Umemura T., Et al., Histopathology of chicks inoculated with chicken anemia agent (MSB 1 -TK5803 strain), Avian Pathol, 18, pp. 73-89, (1989)
[6]  
Henderson J.S., Jackwood D.J., Comparison of the dot blot hybridization assay with antigen detection assays for the diagnosis of infectious bursal disease virus infections, Avian Dis, 34, pp. 744-748, (1990)
[7]  
Hirai K., Kunihiro K., Shimakura S., Characterization of immunosuppression in chickens by infectious bursal disease virus, J Virol, 32, pp. 323-328, (1979)
[8]  
Hodges R.D., The histology of the fowl, pp. 206-213, (1974)
[9]  
Jakowski R.M., Fredrickson T.N., Luginbuhl R.E., Helmboldt C.F., Early changes in bursa of Fabricius from Marek's disease, Avian Dis, 13, pp. 215-222, (1969)
[10]  
Kreider D.L., Skeeles J.K., Parsley M., Et al., Variability in a commercially available enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay system. I. Assay variability, Avian Dis, 35, pp. 1276-1287, (1991)