Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149514 (bronchitis)
6,902 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Severe economic loss due to high mortality and condemnation rates occurred on two commercial broiler facilities. Chickens had moderate-to-severe airsacculitis, pericarditis, perihepatitis, tracheitis, and synovitis. Pasteurella gallinarum was isolated from 16 of 18 pericardia, four of 14 livers, 11 of 16 air sacs, six of seven joints and one of 28 tracheas in pure culture. In addition, Mycoplasma synoviae was isolated from trachea and air sac. Lesions were suggestive of an Escherichia coli septicemia, but E. coli was isolated from only four of 28 tracheas and one of 14 livers in pure culture. A coronavirus was isolated from trachea and lung. Whether this coronavirus represented a vaccine or field strain of infectious bronchitis was not determined. These findings suggested that the severe lesions were due to a concomitant infection with an atypical strain of P. gallinarum.
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PMID:Severe mortality in broiler chickens associated with Mycoplasma synoviae and Pasteurella gallinarum. 141 18

The relative pathogenicity of Esherichia coli isolates from poultry was determined by aerosol exposure of young chickens. Evidence of colisepticemia with airsacculitis and/or pericarditis and perihepatitis was evaluated. A system was devised that included the intratracheal (IT) inoculation of strain SE-17 infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) of chicks at 7 days of age followed by their aerosol exposure to E. coli culture suspensions 2 days later. Each experiment was terminated 6 days later. For comparative purposes in some studies, chicks were housed at 17 C and others at 27 C. The IBV-E. coli challenge procedure proved to be an effective way to determine the relative ability of E. coli isolates to cause death and/or gross lesions in young chickens. With some E. coli isolates, there were minimal or no obvious adverse effects from exposure except when chickens were previously inoculated with IBV. When chicks were housed at 17 C instead of 27 C, slight increases in mortality and decreases in gross lesions were generally observed, probably because the earlier deaths did not allow time for the lesions to become as evident. The E. coli isolate #18344 (Congo Red-positive) was consistently more pathogenic than the Congo Red-negative version of that isolate. Cultures of E. coli previously demonstrated to be pathogenic (VA O1:K1 and DL #29) were among the most pathogenic isolates evaluated in these experiments and were similar to the Congo Red-positive #18344 isolate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pathogenicity of Escherichia coli in aerosols for young chickens. 255 3

The Hitchner B-1 strain of Newcastle disease virus was plaque-cloned and then serially passaged 36 times in specific-pathogen-free (SPF) chicken embryos incubated at two different temperatures. Virus passaged at a reduced temperature (29 C) was identified as cold-adapted (Ca) and virus passaged at the normal temperature (37 C) was designated non-cold-adapted (non-Ca). The Ca and non-Ca B-1 viruses were compared with the parent B-1 and a commercial B-1 vaccine. In vitro Ca B-1 characteristics included adaptation for more rapid growth at 29 C and the aquisition of temperature sensitivity indicated by substantially reduced growth at 41 C, properties not seen with non-Ca B-1. Embryo mean death times for the Ca virus (140 hr) were longer than for non-Ca B-1 (107 hr) and parent B-1 (121 hr) viruses. The Ca virus retained a rapid (< 2 hr) hemagglutination (HA) elution rate but lost the property of binding the monoclonal antibody AVS-I typical of other B-1 strains. The pathogenicity of the Ca B-1 strain was compared to the non-Ca B-1, parent B-1 strain, and a commercial B-1 strain vaccine in 1-day-old broiler-type chickens. Pathogenicity was evaluated by assessing the severity of respiratory disease signs and the incidence of airsacculitis, perihepatitis, and pericarditis lesions in inoculated chicks. A respiratory disease index was calculated for each B-1 strain based on daily observation scores that determined the presence or absence of disease signs (coughing, rales, labored breathing, death) from 1 to 14 days following intratracheal inoculation with 10(6) 50% egg infective doses of virus per chick. The lower respiratory disease index obtained for the Ca B-1 strain (0.075) indicated it was less pathogenic than the commercial B-1 vaccine (0.296) and the non-Ca (0.478) and parent (0.521) B-1 strains. Ca B-1-infected chicks had only a 5% incidence of air sac lesions, compared to chicks given non-Ca (65%), Hitchner B-1 (65%), or a commercial B-1 vaccine (30%). Immunogenicity tests performed in 1-week-old SPF leghorn chickens demonstrated that Ca B-1 induced complete protection when administered intraocularly as a single entity. However, when Ca B-1 was given in combination with a modified live infectious bronchitis virus vaccine, chickens were only partially protected (60-75%) against Texas GB strain-induced neurotropic velogenic Newcastle disease.
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PMID:Attenuation of lentogenic Newcastle disease virus strain B-1 by cold adaptation. 888 91

This study determined optimal conditions for experimental reproduction of colibacillosis by aerosol administration of avian pathogenic Escherichia coli to 2-to-4-wk-old broiler chickens. The basic model for reproducing disease was intranasal administration of approximately 10(4) mean embryo infectious dose of infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) followed by aerosol administration of an 02 or an 078 strain of E. coli in a Horsfall unit (100 ml of a suspension of 10(9) colony-forming units/ml over 40 min). Scores were assigned to groups of infected chickens on the basis of deaths; frequency and severity of lesions in the air sacs, liver and heart; and recovery of the challenge E. coli 6 days post-E. coli infection. An interval of 4 days between the IBV and E. coli challenges was best whether the chickens received the IBV at 8 or 20 days of age. Typically, 50%-80% of the chickens developed airsacculitis and 0 to 29% of the chickens developed pericarditis or perihepatitis, with little or no mortality. Escherichia coli alone resulted in no deaths and 0 to 20% airsacculitis, but these percentages increased to 0 to 5% and 52%-60% when the E. coli aerosol was administered through a cone-shaped chamber. Administration of IBV alone failed to induce lesions. Recovery of the challenge E. coli from chickens did not correlate well with lesions. On the basis of these data, administration of IBV to 20-day-old chickens followed 4 days later by exposure to an avian pathogenic E. coli reproduces avian colibacillosis with the low mortality, high percentage of airsacculitis, and low percentage of septicemic lesions characteristic of the conditions seen in the natural disease.
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PMID:Experimental Escherichia coli respiratory infection in broilers. 1119 29