151 results on '"Fletcher OJ"'
Search Results
2. A Viral Disease of Fledgling Budgerigars
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Bozeman Lh, Dykstra Mj, Lukert Pd, Fletcher Oj, Gaudry D, and Davis Rb
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High rate ,Kidney ,Renal tubule ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Necrosis ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Anatomy ,Biology ,Virus diseases ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Food Animals ,Electron micrographs ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Viral disease ,Enlarged heart ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
Fledgling budgerigars from aviaries in Georgia and Texas were reported to have high rates of mortality. Affected birds died acutely and exhibited abdominal distention and reddening of the skin. Postmortem lesions were hydropericardium, enlarged heart and liver with areas of necrosis, and swollen, congested kidneys. Histologic examination of a variety of tissues revealed cells with enlarged nuclei containing inclusions. Electron micrographs revealed the presence of viral particles 42 to 49 nm in diameter in the nuclei of epithelial cells of the renal tubule.
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- 1981
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3. Case Report: An Outbreak of Type-C Botulism in Three-Week-Old Broilers
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Fletcher Oj and Page Rk
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General Immunology and Microbiology ,Toxin ,Physiology ,Outbreak ,Bacitracin ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Botulinum toxin ,Microbiology ,Penicillin ,Food Animals ,medicine ,Clostridium botulinum ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Botulism ,Antitoxin ,medicine.drug - Abstract
SUMMARY Botulism was diagnosed in 3-week-old broilers from clinical signs, absence of postmortem and histopathological lesions, and demonstration of toxin in the serum of comatose birds. Passive immunization of mice with Clostridium botulinum type-C antitoxin protected against a challenge with serum from comatose birds containing the Cl. botulinum toxin. Total mortality for the grow-out period exceeded 27% and was not altered by water medication with penicillin. Bacitracin at 100 g per ton reduced mortality to 5-7 birds per day.
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- 1975
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4. Demonstration of Eimeria tenella in Bursa of Fabricius of Chickens
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Joseph J. Giambrone, Reid Wm, Anderson Wi, Fletcher Oj, and Eidson Cs
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animal structures ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,Inoculation ,Broiler ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Virus ,Eimeria ,Epithelium ,Infectious bursal disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Food Animals ,parasitic diseases ,embryonic structures ,medicine ,Gametocyte ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Bursa of Fabricius - Abstract
Coccidial life-cytle stages were detected in the bursa of Fabricius of broiler chickens inoculated with Eimeria tenella, whether or not the chickens had previously been infected with infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV). Chickens infected only with E. tenella had developing parasites in the lining epithelium, whereas chickens with both infections had gametocytes also in the epithelial cells surrounding numerous degenerating bursal cysts.
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- 1976
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5. A Study of Breeder Vaccination Programs and Problems in the Broiler Progeny in Saskatchewan Utilizing Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
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Riddell C, Fletcher Oj, Little Ks, and Thayer Sg
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Veterinary medicine ,animal structures ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,animal diseases ,Broiler ,Antibody titer ,food and beverages ,Infectious bronchitis virus ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Newcastle disease ,Virology ,Virus ,Infectious bursal disease ,Vaccination ,Food Animals ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Flock - Abstract
SUMMARY. A survey of antibodies against infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV), infectious bronchitis virus (IBV), Newcastle disease virus (NDV), and reovirus (RV) was conducted in broiler-breeder flocks and selected progeny broiler flocks utilizing the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Marked differences in antibody titers between different breeder flocks were related to differences in vaccination programs. Poor performance in some progeny broiler flocks was related to low antibody titers against IBDV in the source breeder flocks. Progeny broiler flocks in which there was a high incidence of condemnations for airsacculitis had elevated antibody titers against IBV. A few progeny broiler flocks that experienced high mortality due to gangrenous dermatitis had no antibody titers against IBDV at processing. Antibody titers against RV were very variable and could not be related to any production problems.
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- 1988
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6. Dermatitis Produced by Rhodotorula glutins in Broiler-Age Chickens
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Eidson Cs, R. K. Page, Fletcher Oj, and Michaels Ge
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Veterinary medicine ,animal structures ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,Broiler ,food and beverages ,Outbreak ,Dermatomycosis ,Rhodotorula ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Rhodotorula mucilaginosa ,Food Animals ,Bacterial etiology ,embryonic structures ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Epizootic - Abstract
Dermatitis is a major cause of mortality and down-grading of broiler-age chickens in the Southeast. Dermatitis affecting the unfeathered areas of chickens has been described (1,2,3). Frazier et al. (4) and Sanders et al. (5) described a severe gangrenous dermatitis of bacterial etiology involving both the feathered and unfeathered parts of broiler-age chickens. Also frequently seen as causes of dermatitis in broiler-age chickens are nutritional deficiencies and genetically slow feathering of male chickens (6). Dermatitis caused by mycotic agents has not been well documented. A dermatomycosis affecting the feathered and unfeathered areas of chickens and turkeys has been reported (7). Beemer et al. (8) described an epizootic of dermatitis produced by Rhodotorula mucilaginosa on a poultry farm in Israel. A similar outbreak involving Rhodotorula glutins in broiler-type chickens in the southeastern United States is reported here.
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- 1976
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7. Comparison of Two Commercial Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assays and Conventional Methods for Avian Serology
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Fletcher Oj, Stephan G. Thayer, and Pedro Villegas
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animal structures ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,viruses ,Virulence ,Infectious bronchitis virus ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Newcastle disease ,Virus ,Serology ,Infectious bursal disease ,Titer ,Food Animals ,Viral arthritis ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
SUMMARY. Sera tested for hemagglutination-inhibition (HI) activity against Newcastle disease virus (NDV) and infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) and virus-neutralizing (VN) activity against infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) and viral arthritis (VA) virus were collected from a wide variety of accessions into the Diagnostic Services Laboratory, Poultry Disease Research Center, University of Georgia. The sera were then segregated according to HI or VN titer to NDV, IBV, IBDV, or VA virus and stored frozen at -20 C until tested by two commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs). There was good correlation of mean Flockchek ELISA titers or EIA Systems sample-topositive (S/P) ratios with specific HI or VN titers. Flockchek ELISA profile group 3 and EIA Systems mean S/P ratio of 1.12 corresponded to what were considered in our lab to be minimum protective titers for each antigen against virulent challenge in our area.
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- 1987
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8. Effect of Infectious Bursal Agent on the Response of Chickens to Newcastle Disease and Marek's Disease Vaccination
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Joseph J. Giambrone, Eidson Cs, B. O. Barger, Fletcher Oj, Stanley H. Kleven, and R. K. Page
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Veterinary medicine ,Marek's disease ,animal structures ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Reoviridae ,Immunosuppression ,biology.organism_classification ,Newcastle disease ,Virus ,Vaccination ,Titer ,Food Animals ,embryonic structures ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
White Leghorn chickens raised from one day old in an environment contaminated by the infectious bursal agent (IBA) had lower geometric mean titers (GMT) as measured by the hemagglutination-inhibition (HI) test to the Newcastle disease virus (NDV), than control Leghorns reared in an uncontaminated environment. Immunosuppression, defined as a reduction in GMT, was most pronounced at 35-56 days old for Leghorns vaccinated with NDV at 1 and 28 days or at 28 days. In a separate trial with broilers, immunosuppression was similar at 42-56 days old. This study also demonstrated that IBA infection in chickens increased susceptibility to Marek's disease (MD). The unvaccinated control chickens infected with IBA averaged 56.3% MD lesions, whereas unvaccinated controls not exposed to IBA averaged only 18.1% macroscopic lesions. It was also found that 20.7% of the HVT-vaccinated chickens exposed to IBA had gross MD lesions, whereas those HVT-vaccinated chickens reared in an environment free of IBA had 2.99% gross MD lesions.
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- 1976
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9. Airsacculitis Induced in Broilers with a Combination of Mycoplasma gallinarum and Respiratory Viruses
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Fletcher Oj, Eidson Cs, and Stanley H. Kleven
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Air sacs ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Inoculation ,animal diseases ,Mycoplasma gallinarum ,Infectious bronchitis virus ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Newcastle disease ,Microbiology ,Food Animals ,embryonic structures ,biology.protein ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Flock ,Respiratory system ,Antibody - Abstract
Mycoplasma gallinarum was isolated from tracheas and air-sac lesions from broilers in flocks having higher than normal condemnations due to airsacculitis. A representative M. gallinarum isolant, given by aerosol or by air-sac inoculation, produced air-sac lesions in young chickens when given in combination with a vaccine combining Newcastle disease and infectious bronchitis or with a field strain of infectious bronchitis virus.
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- 1978
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10. Characterization of a Papovavirus Isolated from Fledgling Budgerigars
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Gaudry D, Lukert Pd, Bozeman Lh, Fletcher Oj, Davis Rb, and Dykstra Mj
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General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,Inoculation ,Embryo ,Intranuclear Inclusion Body ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Virus ,Papovaviridae ,Food Animals ,Budgerigar ,biology.animal ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Papovavirus ,Cytopathic effect - Abstract
SUMMARY A virus suspected of causing high death rates in fledgling budgerigars in Georgia and Texas aviaries was isolated in budgerigar embryo fibroblasts inoculated with tissue homogenates from affected birds. Virus was most easily recovered from tissues containing many intranuclear inclusion bodies. Cytopathic effect on fibroblasts of all four isolates was characterized by a swollen nucleus followed by rounding and detachment of the affected cell from the monolayer. Properties suggesting the B-931 isolate belongs to the Papovaviridae family are (1) presence of DNA; (2) insensitivity to treatment with CHCl3; and (3) presence of cubic viral particles 42 to 49 nm in diameter in the nucleus of infected chicken embryo fibroblasts. The isolate did not hemagglutinate erythrocytes of chickens, turkeys, budgerigars, guinea pigs, or type O humans and was basically stable against heating and freeze-thawing. An examination of fledgling budgerigars from infected aviaries demonstrated that sick birds carried more virus than healthy birds.
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- 1981
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11. Involvement of a Type-8 Avian Adenovirus in the Etiology of Inclusion Body Hepatitis
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Kleven Sh, Fletcher Oj, Grimes Tm, and King Dj
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Hepatitis ,animal structures ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Avian adenovirus ,Outbreak ,Spleen ,Disease ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Titer ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Food Animals ,Immunology ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Bursa of Fabricius ,Flock - Abstract
SUMMARY Type-8 avian adenoviruses were isolated from chickens in a commercial flock suffering an outbrcak of inclusion body hepatitis. Serum-neutralizing titer to this type, but not to 7 other types of avian adenovirus, was more than 4 times as high in convalescing chickens as in chickens from the flock bled 2 weeks previously, during the disease outbreak. A disease similar to that in the commercial flock and to inclusion body hepatitis as described in the literature was produced by intra-abdominal inoculation of a type-8 isolant, AMG 5 (2a), into 1-day-old specific-pathogen-free chicks. Pathologic features of the disease included necrotizing hepatitis, pancreatitis, and severe lymphoid depletion of the bursa of Fabricius, thymus, and spleen. It was concluded that type-8 avian adenoviruses were involved in the etiology of the naturally occurring outbreak of inclusion body hepatitis.
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- 1977
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12. Ultrastructural Postmortem Changes in Chicken Kidneys at 27 C
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Brown Tp and Fletcher Oj
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Glomerular basement membrane ,Karyorrhexis ,Podocyte foot ,Biology ,Epithelium ,Postmortem Changes ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Food Animals ,medicine ,Ultrastructure ,Animal Science and Zoology ,sense organs ,Hyaline ,Pyknosis - Abstract
SUMMARY. Ultrastructural postmortem changes ofglomeruli, proximal tubules (PT), distal tubules (DT), and cortical collecting ducts (CD) were studied in adult chickens held at 27 C for 0, 1, 5, 10, 30, 60, or 360 minutes. There were marked ultrastructural alterations in tissues considered normal by light microscopy. The earliest changes, evident in immediately fixed samples, consisted of apical cell swelling of PT and DT epithelium and formation of smaller projections from glomerular capillary endothelium. Swelling increased with time, and gaps in cell membranes of tubular cytoplasmic blebs were evident by 10 minutes postmortem. The urinary space also contained cellular debris in immediately fixed samples and was filled by swollen epithelial cells by 10 minutes postmortem. Organelle changes were pronounced by 5 minutes in PT epithelium and by 10 minutes in DT epithelium. These initial changes consisted of dilation of mitochondrial and endoplasmic reticulum. Flocculent mitochondrial matrix densities were present by 5 minutes in PT epithelium and enlarged and appeared in other tubular segments as the time postmortem increased. Nuclear chromatin margination occurred first in 10-minute samples of PT and DT, and it was present by 30 minutes in glomerular epithelial cells. Chromatin clumping was present in PT and DT epithelium at 30 minutes and was followed by pyknosis and karyorrhexis at 360 minutes. These latter nuclear changes were not found in glomerular cells during the study. Nuclei of CD showed little change during the periods studied. The glomerular basement membrane appeared as a single hyaline membrane by 30 minutes postmortem, but this membrane and podocyte foot processes showed little further change by 360 minutes postmortem.
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- 1986
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13. Bursal Lesions in Chickens Inoculated with Marek's Disease Vaccines
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Eidson Cs, Stanley H. Kleven, and Fletcher Oj
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Marek's disease ,animal structures ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Food Animals ,biology ,Inoculation ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Bursa of Fabricius ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology - Abstract
The effects on the bursa of Fabricius (BF) of a herpesvirus, isolated from turkeys (HVT) and used as a vaccine in chickens for the prevention of Marek's disease (MD), were examined. In 25 HVT-vaccinated unchallenged chickens, histologic examination of the BF failed to reveal detectable lesions. Thirty-two of 33 nonHVT-vaccinated MDHV-challenged chickens had BF lesions, compared with 17 of 30 HVT-vaccinated MDHV-challenged chickens. The BF lesions observed were much less severe (0.5 on an arbitrary 0-to-3 scale) in the HVT-vaccinated MDHV-challenged group than in the unvaccinated MDHV-challenged group (2.2 on the same scale). The BF lesions observed were similar to those previously described in MDHV-infected chickens. Marked elevation of the serum gamma-globulin was observed at 7 weeks but not 4 or 8 weeks in HVT-vaccinated MDHV-challenged chickens.
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- 1972
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14. Characterization of immune responses and immunopathology in turkeys experimentally infected with clostridial dermatitis-producing strains of Clostridium septicum.
- Author
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Criollo V, John FA, Gaghan C, Fletcher OJ, Thachil A, Crespo R, and Kulkarni RR
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- Humans, Animals, Turkeys, Clostridium, Inflammation veterinary, Immunity, Clostridium septicum physiology, Clostridium Infections veterinary, Dermatitis veterinary, Poultry Diseases
- Abstract
Clostridium septicum is one of the major causative agents of clostridial dermatitis (CD), an emerging disease of turkeys, characterized by sudden deaths and necrotic dermatitis. Despite its economic burden on the poultry industry, the immunopathological changes and pathogen-specific immune responses are poorly characterized. Here, we used three strains of C. septicum, namely Str. A1, Str. B1 and Str. C1, isolated from CD field outbreaks, to experimentally infect turkeys to evaluate local (skin and muscle) and systemic (spleen) pathological and immunological responses. Results showed that while all three strains produced an acute disease, Str. A1 and B1 caused significantly higher mortality when compared to Str. C1. Gross and histopathology evaluation showed that birds infected with Str. A1 and B1 had severe inflammatory, edematous, granulomatous and necrotic lesions in the skin, muscle and spleen, while these lesions produced by Str. C1 were relatively less severe and mostly confined to skin and/or muscle. Immune gene expression in these tissues showed that Str. B1-infected birds had significantly higher expression of interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6 and interferon (IFN)γ genes compared to uninfected control, suggesting a robust inflammatory response both locally as well as systemically. The transcription of IL-1β and IFNγ in the muscle or spleen of Str. A1-infected birds and IL-1β in the skin of Str. C1-infected group was also significantly higher than control. Additionally, Str. A1 or B1-infected groups also had significantly higher IL-4 transcription in these tissues, while birds infected with all three strains developed C. septicum-specific serum antibodies. Furthermore, splenic cellular immunophenotyping in the infected turkeys showed a marked reduction in CD4+ cells. Collectively, it can be inferred that host responses against C. septicum involve an acute inflammatory response along with antibody production and that the disease severity seem to depend on the strain of C. septicum involved in CD in turkeys., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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15. Mucosal and systemic lymphoid immune responses against Clostridium perfringens strains with variable virulence in the production of necrotic enteritis in broiler chickens.
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Kulkarni RR, Gaghan C, Gorrell K, and Fletcher OJ
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- Animals, Clostridium perfringens genetics, Chickens, Virulence, Immunity, Anti-Inflammatory Agents metabolism, Clostridium Infections veterinary, Enteritis veterinary, Poultry Diseases pathology
- Abstract
Necrotic enteritis (NE), caused by Clostridium perfringens , is an economically important disease of chickens. Although NE pathogenesis is moderately well studied, the host immune responses against C. perfringens are poorly understood. The present study used an experimental NE model to characterize lymphoid immune responses in the caecal tonsils (CT), bursa of Fabricius, Harderian gland (HG) and spleen tissues of broiler chickens infected with four netB + C. perfringens strains (CP1, CP5, CP18, and CP26), of which CP18 and CP26 strains also carried the tpeL gene. The gross and histopathological lesions in chickens revealed CP5 to be avirulent, while CP1, CP18, and CP26 strains were virulent with CP26 being "very virulent". Gene expression analysis showed that, while the virulent strains induced a significantly upregulated expression of pro-inflammatory IL-1β gene in CT, the CP26-infected birds had significantly higher CT transcription of IFNγ and IL-6 pro-inflammatory genes compared to CP5-infected or uninfected chickens. Furthermore, CP26 infection also led to significantly increased bursal and HG expression of the anti-inflammatory/regulatory genes, IL-10 or TGFβ, compared to control, CP5 and CP1 groups. Additionally, the splenic pro- and anti-inflammatory transcriptional changes were observed only in the CP26-infected chickens. An antibody-mediated response, as characterized by increased IL-4 and/or IL-13 transcription and elevated IgM levels in birds infected with virulent strains, particularly in the CP26-infected group compared to uninfected controls, was also evident. Collectively, our findings suggest that lymphoid immune responses during NE in chickens are spatially regulated such that the inflammatory responses against C. perfringens depend on the virulence of the strain.
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- 2023
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16. Clinicopathologic, Gross Necropsy, and Histopathologic Effects of High-Dose, Repeated Meloxicam Administration in Rhode Island Red Chickens ( Gallus gallus domesticus ).
- Author
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Houck EL, Petritz OA, Chen LR, Fletcher OJ, Thomson AE, and Flammer K
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- Administration, Oral, Animals, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal adverse effects, Autopsy veterinary, Female, Meloxicam, Rhode Island, Chickens, Gout chemically induced, Gout veterinary
- Abstract
Meloxicam is a commonly prescribed non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug for backyard poultry that has demonstrated pharmacodynamic efficacy at a single high dose of 5 mg/ kg. This study characterized the adverse effects of meloxicam administered in chickens at an approximate dose of 5 mg/kg orally twice daily for 5 days. Twenty-one adult Rhode Island Red hens ( Gallus gallus domesticus ), judged to be healthy based on an external physical examination, complete blood count (CBC), and plasma biochemistry panel, were recruited for this study. The subject birds were randomly assigned to a treatment (n = 11) or control group (n = 10) and received a 15-mg tablet of meloxicam or a nonmedicated feed pellet, respectively, orally twice daily. Physical examinations and body weight measurements were performed daily, and observation for clinical signs occurred twice daily. Following completion of the 5-day treatment course, an external physical examination, blood collection for a CBC and plasma biochemistry panel, euthanasia, necropsy, and measurement of meloxicam tissue residues were performed. During the treatment course, 1 hen from the treatment group died with peracute clinical signs, 2 hens from the treatment group died suddenly with no clinical signs, and 1 hen from the treatment group became acutely lethargic and was euthanized. Within the meloxicam group, 7 out of 11 hens had gross and histologic evidence of varying levels of renal acute tubular injury and gout. Plasma uric acid concentrations were above the species reference intervals in all affected hens in the treatment group that were still available for testing. The control group had no evidence of renal injury or gout based on postmortem examinations. Based on the results of this study, repeated oral dosing of meloxicam in chickens at 5 mg/kg twice daily is not recommended.
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- 2022
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17. Gross Morphometry, Histomorphometry, and Immunohistochemistry Confirm Early and Persistent Jejunal Crypt Hyperplasia in Poults with Enteritis and Depressed Growth.
- Author
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Fletcher OJ, Mansell R, Martin MP, Borst LB, Barnes HJ, and Gonzalez LM
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- Animals, Caspase 3 metabolism, Chickens, Enteritis metabolism, Enteritis pathology, Enteritis physiopathology, Female, Histones metabolism, Hyperplasia metabolism, Hyperplasia pathology, Hyperplasia physiopathology, Immunohistochemistry, Jejunum anatomy & histology, Jejunum metabolism, Male, North Carolina, Phosphorylation, Poultry Diseases metabolism, Poultry Diseases physiopathology, Turkeys anatomy & histology, Enteritis veterinary, Hyperplasia veterinary, Jejunum growth & development, Poultry Diseases pathology, Turkeys growth & development
- Abstract
Phosphorylated histone 3 (PH3) and cleaved caspase 3 (CCASP3) were used to detect proliferating and apoptotic cells, respectively, in the jejunums of female sibling poults, with and without enteritis and depressed growth, from hatch to day 35. Poults that developed enteritis and depressed growth (SIB flock) were raised on a commercial farm in eastern North Carolina, whereas poults with normal growth and no enteritis (TAU flock) were raised in the Teaching Animal Unit at North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine. Beginning on day 5 through day 35 and at processing, TAU poults were significantly heavier than SIB poults. Jejunal weights, relative jejunal weights, and jejunal densities were greater in SIB poults from day 10 through 35. Jejunal efficiency (body weight /jejunal length) was higher in TAU poults at day 5 and days 10 through 35. Mucosal thickness was greater in SIB poults between days 7 and 21 but greater in TAU poults at days 28 and 35. From day 7 to 35, villus-to-crypt ratios were higher for TAU poults and lower for SIB poults because hyperplastic crypts formed a greater percentage of the mucosa in SIB poults. By day 7, PH3- and CCASP3-positive cells were increased in SIB poults, showing that mucosal changes resulted from combined crypt epithelial hyperplasia and increased apoptosis of villous enterocytes. Findings in this study confirm that enteritis, in the absence of clinical signs, and depressed growth in turkey poults begins by day 7, can be identified microscopically, persists for at least 35 days, is associated with lower processing weights, and has a profound negative effect on turkey growth.
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- 2018
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18. Evaluation of factors influencing the development of late Marek's disease virus-induced immunosuppression: virus pathotype and host sex.
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Faiz NM, Cortes AL, Guy JS, Fletcher OJ, Cimino T, and Gimeno IM
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- Animals, Female, Gene Expression Regulation immunology, Male, Marek Disease prevention & control, Marek Disease virology, MicroRNAs genetics, MicroRNAs metabolism, Sex Factors, Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms, Viral Vaccines immunology, Chickens, Mardivirus classification, Marek Disease immunology
- Abstract
Marek's disease virus (MDV) is a herpesvirus that induces lymphoma and immunosuppression in chickens. MDV-induced immunosuppression (MDV-IS) is complex and can be divided into two phases: early-MDV-IS associated with cytolytic infection in the lymphoid organs in chickens lacking maternal antibodies against MDV (MAbs) and late-MDV-IS that appears later in the pathogenesis and occurs even in chickens bearing MAbs. We have recently developed a model to reproduce late-MDV-IS under laboratory conditions. This model evaluates late-MDV-IS indirectly by assessing the effect of MDV infection on the efficacy of infectious laryngotracheitis (ILT) vaccines against challenge with ILT virus. In the present study, we have used this model to investigate the role of two factors (MDV pathotype and host sex) on the development of late-MDV-IS. Five MDV strains representing three different pathotypes: virulent (vMDV; 617A, GA), very virulent (vvMDV; Md5), and very virulent plus (vv+MDV; 648A, 686), were evaluated. Only vv+ strains were able to induce late-MDV-IS. An immunosuppression rank (IS-rank) was established based on the ability of MDV to reduce the efficacy of chicken embryo origin vaccine (values go from 0 to 100, with 100 being the highest immunosuppressive ability). The IS-rank of the evaluated MDV strains ranged from 5.97 (GA) to 20.8 (617A) in the vMDV strains, 5.97 to 16.24 in the vvMDV strain Md5, and 39.08 to 68.2 in the vv+ strains 648A and 686. In this study both male and female chickens were equally susceptible to MDV-IS by vv+MDV 686. Our findings suggest that late-MDV-IS is a unique feature of vv+ strains.
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- 2017
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19. Chemoprevention of spontaneous ovarian cancer in the domestic hen.
- Author
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Mocka EH, Stern RA, Fletcher OJ, Anderson KE, Petitte JN, and Mozdziak PE
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- Animal Feed analysis, Animals, Chickens, Diet veterinary, Female, Genes, p53 drug effects, Genital Neoplasms, Female prevention & control, Genital Neoplasms, Female veterinary, Oviducts pathology, Oviposition, Pyrimidines administration & dosage, Adenocarcinoma prevention & control, Adenocarcinoma veterinary, Chemoprevention veterinary, Ovarian Neoplasms prevention & control, Ovarian Neoplasms veterinary, Pyrimidines pharmacology
- Abstract
The hen is an attractive animal model for in vivo testing of agents that thwart ovarian carcinogenesis because ovarian cancer in the domestic hen features clinical and molecular alterations that are similar to ovarian cancer in humans, including a high incidence of p53 mutations. The objective of the study was to test the potential ovarian cancer chemopreventive effect of the p53 stabilizing compound CP-31398 on hens that spontaneously present the ovarian cancer phenotype. Beginning at 79 wk of age, 576 egg-laying hens (Gallus domesticus) were randomized to diets containing different amounts of CP-31398 for 94 wk, 5 d, comprising a control group (C) (n = 144), which was fed a diet containing 0 ppm (mg/kg) of CP-31398; a low-dose treatment (LDT) group (n = 144), which was fed a diet containing 100 ppm of CP-31398; a moderate-dose treatment (MDT) group (n = 144) which was fed a diet containing 200 ppm of CP-31398; and a high-dose treatment (HDT) group (n = 144), which was fed a diet containing 300 ppm of CP-31398. Hens were killed at 174 wk of age to determine the incidence of ovarian and oviductal adenocarcinomas. Whereas the incidence of localized and metastatic ovarian cancers in the MDT and HDT groups was significantly lower (up to 77%) compared to levels in the C and LDT groups (P < 0.05), the incidence of oviductal cancer was unaffected by CP-31398. CP-31398 appears to be an effective tool for chemoprevention against ovarian malignancies, but does not appear to affect oviductal malignancies., (© 2016 Poultry Science Association Inc.)
- Published
- 2017
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20. Early infection with Marek's disease virus can jeopardize protection conferred by laryngotracheitis vaccines: a method to study MDV-induced immunosuppression.
- Author
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Faiz NM, Cortes AL, Guy JS, Fletcher OJ, West M, Montiel E, and Gimeno IM
- Subjects
- Animals, Chickens virology, Female, Immunosuppression Therapy, Marek Disease virology, Models, Immunological, Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms, Tracheitis prevention & control, Tracheitis virology, Chickens immunology, Herpesvirus 2, Gallid immunology, Marek Disease immunology, Tracheitis veterinary, Vaccination veterinary, Viral Vaccines immunology
- Abstract
Marek's disease virus (MDV) is a herpesvirus that induces lymphomas and immunosuppression in chickens. MDV-induced immunosuppression (MDV-IS) is divided into two phases: early-MDV-IS occurring mainly in chickens lacking maternal antibodies (MAb) against MDV and associated with lymphoid organ atrophy; and late-MDV-IS occurring once MDV enters latency and during tumour development. Our objectives were to document the impact of late-MDV-IS on commercial poultry (meat-type chickens bearing MAb against MDV and that were vaccinated or unvaccinated against MD) and to optimize a model to study late-MDV-IS under laboratory conditions. The impact of late-MDV-IS was evaluated by assessing the effect of early infection (day of age) with a very virulent plus MDV (vv+MDV) on the efficacy of chicken-embryo-origin (CEO) infectious laryngotracheitis (ILT) virus vaccine against ILT challenge. The CEO ILT vaccine was administered in water at 14 days of age and ILT virus (ILTV) challenge was done intratracheally at 30 days of age. Development of ILT was monitored by daily evaluation of clinical signs, development of gross and histological lesions in trachea, and quantification of ILTV transcripts in trachea. Infection with vv+MDV strain 648A resulted in total abrogation of protection conferred by the CEO vaccine against ILTV challenge even in chickens vaccinated at 1 day of age with either HVT, HVT+SB-1, or CVI988. Chickens exposed to vv+MDV prior to vaccination with CEO ILTV vaccine had similar (P < 0.05) clinical scores, gross lesions, histopathologic lesion scores, and load of ILTV transcripts in trachea after ILTV challenge, as chickens that were not vaccinated with CEO ILTV vaccine.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Dietary toxicity of soluble and insoluble molybdenum to northern bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus).
- Author
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Stafford JM, Lambert CE, Zyskowski JA, Engfehr CL, Fletcher OJ, Clark SL, Tiwary A, Gulde CM, and Sample BE
- Subjects
- Animals, Colinus growth & development, Feeding Behavior drug effects, Female, Longevity drug effects, Male, Weight Gain drug effects, Colinus metabolism, Disulfides toxicity, Molybdenum toxicity, Soil Pollutants toxicity
- Abstract
Limited data are available on the effects of molybdenum (Mo) on avian wildlife, which impairs evaluation of ecological exposure and risk. While Mo is an essential trace nutrient in birds, little is known of its toxicity to birds exposed to molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), the predominant form found in molybdenite ore. The chemical form and bioavailability of Mo is important in determining its toxicity. Avian toxicity tests typically involve a soluble form of Mo, such as sodium molybdate dihydrate (SMD, Na2MoO4·2H2O); however MoS2 is generally insoluble, with low bioaccessibility under most environmental conditions. The current study monitored survival and general health (body weight and food consumption) of 9-day old northern bobwhite exposed to soluble Mo (SMD) and ore-related Mo (MoS2) in their diet for 30 days. Toxicity and bioavailability (e.g. tissue distribution) of the two Mo forms were compared. Histopathology evaluations and serum, kidney, liver, and bone tissue sample analyses were conducted. Copper, a nutrient integrally associated with Mo toxicity, was also measured in the diet and tissue. No treatment-related mortality occurred and no treatment-related lesions were recorded for either Mo form. Tissue analyses detected increased Mo concentrations in serum, kidney, liver, and bone tissues following exposure to SMD, with decreasing concentrations following a post-exposure period. For the soluble form, a No-Observed-Adverse-Effect Concentration (NOAEC) of 1200 mg Mo as SMD/kg feed (134 mg SMD/kg body weight/day) was identified based on body weight and food consumption. No adverse effects were observed in birds exposed to MoS2 at the maximum dose of 5000 mg MoS2/kg feed (545 mg MoS2/kg body weight/day). These results show that effects associated with MoS2, the more environmentally prevalent and less bioavailable Mo form, are much less than those observed for SMD. These data should support more realistic representations of exposure and risks to avian receptors from environmental Mo.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. History of the Journal of Veterinary Medical Education.
- Author
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Fletcher OJ, Hooper BE, and Schoenfeld-Tacher R
- Subjects
- History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, United States, Education, Veterinary history, Periodicals as Topic history
- Abstract
The Journal of Veterinary Medical Education (JVME), with the leadership of seven editors and two interim editors, grew from 33 pages of mostly news and commentary to become the premier source for information exchange in veterinary medical education. The first national publication of the Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges (AAVMC) was a 21-page newsletter published in December 1973. This one-time newsletter was followed by volume 1, issue 1 of JVME, published in spring 1974 and edited by William W. Armistead. Richard Talbot was the second and longest serving editor, and under his leadership, JVME grew in the number and quality of papers. Lester Crawford and John Hubbell served as interim editors, maintaining quality and keeping JVME on track until a new editor was in place. Robert Wilson, Billy Hooper, Donal Walsh, Henry Baker, and the current editor, Daryl Buss, are major contributors to the success of JVME. The early history of the journal is described by Billy Hooper and followed by a brief history of the periods of each of the editors. This history concludes with objective and subjective evaluations of the impacts of JVME.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Instruction and Curriculum in Veterinary Medical Education: A 50-Year Perspective.
- Author
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Fletcher OJ, Hooper BE, and Schoenfeld-Tacher R
- Subjects
- Education, Veterinary trends, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, United States, Curriculum trends, Education, Veterinary history
- Abstract
Our knowledge of veterinary medicine has expanded greatly over the past 50 years. To keep pace with these changes and produce competent professionals ready to meet evolving societal needs, instruction within veterinary medical curricula has undergone a parallel evolution. The curriculum of 1966 has given way, shifting away from lecture-laboratory model with few visual aids to a program of active learning, significant increases in case- or problem-based activities, and applications of technology, including computers, that were unimaginable 50 years ago. Curricula in veterinary colleges no longer keep all students in lockstep or limit clinical experiences to the fourth year, and instead have moved towards core electives with clinical activities provided from year 1. Provided here are examples of change within veterinary medical education that, in the view of the authors, had positive impacts on the evolution of instruction and curriculum. These improvements in both how and what we teach are now being made at a more rapid pace than at any other time in history and are based on the work of many faculty and administrators over the past 50 years.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Epithelial cell tumors of the hen reproductive tract.
- Author
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Harris EA, Fletcher OJ, Anderson KE, Petitte JN, Kopelovich L, and Mozdziak PE
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Gastrointestinal Neoplasms classification, Gastrointestinal Neoplasms epidemiology, Gastrointestinal Neoplasms pathology, Genital Diseases, Female classification, Genital Diseases, Female epidemiology, Genital Diseases, Female pathology, Incidence, Ovarian Neoplasms classification, Ovarian Neoplasms epidemiology, Ovarian Neoplasms pathology, Poultry Diseases classification, Poultry Diseases epidemiology, Chickens, Epithelial Cells pathology, Gastrointestinal Neoplasms veterinary, Genital Diseases, Female veterinary, Ovarian Neoplasms veterinary, Oviducts pathology, Poultry Diseases pathology
- Abstract
There is a paucity of preclinical models that simulate the development of ovarian tumors in humans. At present, the egg-laying hen appears to be the most promising model to study the spontaneous occurrence of ovarian tumors in the clinical setting. Although gross classification and histologic grade of tumors have been used prognostically in women with ovarian tumors, there is currently no single system that is universally used to classify reproductive tumors in the hen. Four hundred and one 192-wk-old egg-laying hens were necropsied to determine the incidence of reproductive tumors using both gross pathology and histologic classification. Gross pathologic classifications were designated as follows: birds presenting with ovarian tumors only (class 1), those presenting with oviductal and ovarian tumors (class 2), those with ovarian and oviductal tumors that metastasized to the gastrointestinal tract (class 3), those with ovarian and oviductal tumors that metastasized to the gastrointestinal tract and other distant organs (class 4), those with oviductal tumors only (class 5), those with oviductal tumors that metastasized to other organs with no ovarian involvement (class 6), and those with ovarian tumors that metastasized to other organs with no oviductal involvement (class 7), including birds with gastrointestinal tumors and no reproductive involvement (GI only) and those with no tumors (normal). Histopathologic classifications range from grades 1 to 3 and are based on mitotic developments and cellular differentiation. An updated gross pathology and histologic classification systems for the hen reproductive malignancies provides a method to report the range of reproductive tumors revealed in a flock of aged laying hens.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Transmissible viral proventriculitis identified in broiler breeder and layer hens.
- Author
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Marusak RA, West MA, Davis JF, Fletcher OJ, and Guy JS
- Subjects
- Animals, Birnaviridae isolation & purification, Fatal Outcome, Female, Formaldehyde chemistry, Georgia, Paraffin Embedding veterinary, Poultry Diseases pathology, Proventriculus virology, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction veterinary, Sequence Analysis, DNA veterinary, Stomach Diseases diagnosis, Stomach Diseases pathology, Stomach Diseases virology, Viral Proteins genetics, Birnaviridae genetics, Chickens, Poultry Diseases diagnosis, Poultry Diseases virology, Proventriculus pathology, Stomach Diseases veterinary
- Abstract
Transmissible viral proventriculitis (TVP) is a recognized cause of production losses in broiler chickens, but previously it has not been reported in broiler breeder and commercial layer hens. In this study, TVP was identified in broiler breeder and commercial layer hens, 9-20 wk of age, based on histopathologic detection of characteristic microscopic lesions. Microscopic lesions in proventriculi of affected hens consisted of glandular epithelial necrosis, ductal epithelial hyperplasia, replacement of glandular epithelium with ductal epithelium, and diffuse interstitial lymphoid infiltration. Additionally, chicken proventricular necrosis virus (CPNV), a virus previously identified as the etiology of TVP in broiler chickens, was detected in proventriculi of TVP-affected hens using a reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction procedure. The findings identify TVP as a potential cause of production losses in broiler breeder and commercial layer hens and provide additional evidence for etiologic involvement in TVP by CPNV.
- Published
- 2012
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- View/download PDF
26. Cost effective and time efficient measurement of CD4, CD8, major histocompatibility complex Class II, and macrophage antigen expression in the lungs of chickens.
- Author
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Fletcher OJ, Tan X, Cortes L, and Gimeno I
- Subjects
- Animals, Antigens, Viral immunology, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Herpesvirus 2, Gallid genetics, Histocompatibility Antigens Class II immunology, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted standards, Immunohistochemistry veterinary, Lung Diseases diagnosis, Lung Diseases immunology, Macrophages, Alveolar chemistry, Marek Disease diagnosis, Marek Disease virology, Poultry Diseases diagnosis, Poultry Diseases immunology, RNA, Viral chemistry, RNA, Viral genetics, Random Allocation, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction veterinary, Retrospective Studies, Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms, Chickens, Herpesvirus 2, Gallid immunology, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Lung Diseases veterinary, Macrophages, Alveolar immunology, Marek Disease immunology, Poultry Diseases virology
- Abstract
Cells expressing CD4, CD8, major histocompatibility complex (MHC) Class II, and macrophage biomarkers in lungs of chickens were quantified by measuring total area of antigen expressed using imageJ, a software program developed at the National Institutes of Health and available at no cost. The procedures reported here were rapid, and reproducible. Total area of antigen expressed had positive correlation with manual counts of cells expressing CD4 and CD8 biomarkers after inoculation with serotype 1 Marek's disease virus (MDV) vaccines. Visual inspection and overlays prepared from outlines of cells counted by imageJ confirmed agreement between antigen expression and area measured. Total area measured was not dependent on time of image acquisition from randomly selected fields from the same slides. Total area values were not computer specific, but acquisition of the original images required standardization of microscope used and camera setup. All steps in the process from sample collection through sectioning, staining, and image acquisition must be standardized as much as possible. Chickens infected with a very virulent+ (vv(+)) isolate of MDV (648A) had increased CD4, CD8, MHC Class II, and macrophage biomarker expression compared to noninfected control chickens at 10 days post infection, but variable responses depending on the specific biomarker measured at 3 and 5 days post infection. The procedure described here is faster and more reproducible than manual counting in cases (CD4 and CD8) where the number of positive cells is low enough for manual counts. Manual counting is not possible with MHC Class II and macrophage antigens nor when CD4(+) cells are present in large numbers following proliferation to tumors, thus subjective systems are used for scoring in these conditions. Using imageJ as described eliminates the need for subjective and less reproducible methods for measuring expression of these antigens., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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27. Selected blood chemistry values in mobility-impaired broiler breeder hens with suspected calcium tetany using the i-STAT handheld clinical analyzer.
- Author
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Martin MP, Wineland M, Fletcher OJ, and Barnes HJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Chemical Analysis instrumentation, Blood Chemical Analysis veterinary, Blood Gas Analysis instrumentation, Blood Gas Analysis veterinary, Chickens, Female, Hypocalcemia blood, Hypocalcemia diagnosis, Hypocalcemia pathology, Movement, Poultry Diseases blood, Poultry Diseases pathology, Reference Values, Tetany blood, Tetany diagnosis, Tetany pathology, Calcium deficiency, Hypocalcemia veterinary, Poultry Diseases diagnosis, Tetany veterinary
- Abstract
Calcium tetany is a poorly defined disease of broiler breeder hens that results from acute hypocalcemia. It is characterized by impaired mobility, increased mortality, and absence of gross lesions that would explain the impaired mobility. To evaluate if hens with impaired mobility had calcium tetany or other abnormalities, blood values from normal and affected hens were determined using the i-STAT handheld clinical analyzer. Three flocks were evaluated weekly prior to peak production (range 25-30 wk of age) comparing normal hens to hens with clinically apparent calcium tetany. Calcium tetany suspect (CaTS) hens from four additional flocks were also evaluated. Significant hypocalcemia (P < 0.001) was observed in CaTS hens (average = 1.14 mmol/L ionized calcium [iCa]) compared to normal hens (average = 1.53 mmol/L iCa) in only one of three flocks sampled weekly. Clinically affected hens from one of the other four flocks also had hypocalcemia. Blood value abnormalities in mobility-impaired hens without hypocalcemia included hypernatremia. Findings in this study indicate calcium tetany is one cause of impaired mobility in breeder hens, but mobility impairment without hypocalcemia can also occur. Calcium tetany should be confirmed by finding significantly decreased levels of iCa in the blood, as diagnosis based on clinical presentation and necropsy results can be inaccurate. The i-STAT handheld clinical analyzer is an efficient, relatively low-cost method to determine iCa and other blood chemistry values that may be associated with impaired mobility in broiler breeder hens.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Macrorhabdus ornithogaster (Megabacterium) infection in adult hobby chickens in North America.
- Author
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Behnke EL and Fletcher OJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Ascomycota classification, Enteritis microbiology, Female, Gizzard, Avian pathology, Male, Mycoses epidemiology, Mycoses microbiology, Mycoses pathology, North America epidemiology, Pets, Proventriculus pathology, Ascomycota isolation & purification, Chickens, Mycoses veterinary
- Abstract
A field investigation was conducted on a flock of adult hobby chickens showing intermittent signs of enteritis. Roosters examined in the initial field visit and postmortem had cecal worms, roundworms, tetratrichomonads, and coccidiosis. Macrorhabdus ornithogaster was diagnosed histologically in the mucosal isthmus of the proventriculus and ventriculus. Three roosters and two hens were examined in a follow-up investigation of the flock conducted 9 days later. Macrorhabdus ornithogaster was confirmed in one hen.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Detection of chicken proventricular necrosis virus (R11/3 virus) in experimental and naturally occurring cases of transmissible viral proventriculitis with the use of a reverse transcriptase-PCR procedure.
- Author
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Guy JS, West MA, Fuller FJ, Marusak RA, Shivaprasad HL, Davis JL, and Fletcher OJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Cells, Cultured, Chick Embryo, Adenoviridae Infections veterinary, Aviadenovirus, Chickens, Poultry Diseases virology, Proventriculus virology, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction veterinary
- Abstract
A reverse-transcriptase-polymerase-chain-reaction (RT-PCR) procedure was evaluated for detection of chicken proventricular necrosis virus (CPNV) in transmissible viral proventriculitis (TVP) -affected chickens. The RT-PCR procedure was compared with indirect immunofluorescence (IFA) and virus isolation for detection of CPNV in experimentally infected chickens. Microscopic lesions characteristic of TVP were detected on days 5-35 postexposure (PE) in CPNV-infected chickens; CPNV was detected by RT-PCR on days 3-14 PE in freshly collected proventriculi, and on days 1-14 PE in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) proventriculi. CPNV was detected in proventriculi of experimentally infected chickens by IFA on days 3-10 PE, and by virus isolation on days 1-14 PE. With IFA used as a reference, sensitivity of the RT-PCR procedure with freshly collected and FFPE proventriculi was 88% and 100%, respectively; specificity was 83% and 86%, respectively. Proventriculi (FFPE) obtained from suspect TVP cases (n=19) were evaluated for presence of CPNV by RT-PCR and microscopic lesions consistentwith TVP. CPNV was detected by RT-PCR in proventriculi from 8/11 TVP (+) cases (24/36 tissue sections). TVP (+) cases were defined by microscopic lesions characteristic of TVP; CPNV was not detected in proventriculi (0/8 cases, 0/32 tissue sections) in the absence of these lesions. The association between presence of TVP-characteristic microscopic lesions and presence of CPNV was highly significant (P = 0.0014). These findings indicate the utility of the RT-PCR procedure for detection of CPNV and provide additional evidence for an etiologic role for this virus in TVP.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Identification of Ascaridia numidae in guinea fowl (Numida meleagris) and association with elevated mortality.
- Author
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Robbins KM, Ye W, and Fletcher OJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Ascaridiasis mortality, Ascaridiasis parasitology, Base Sequence, DNA, Helminth, Disease Outbreaks, Jejunum parasitology, Jejunum pathology, Polymerase Chain Reaction veterinary, Poultry Diseases mortality, Ascaridia, Ascaridiasis veterinary, Galliformes, Poultry Diseases parasitology
- Abstract
An outbreak of ascaridiasis occurred in 10-wk-old guinea fowl (Numida meleagris) on a commercial farm. Birds had exhibited elevated mortality (11.66%) in the previous week, as well as increased water consumption, weakness, anorexia, and stunted growth. Numerous nematodes, occasionally occluding the intestinal lumen, were present in the jejunum and ileum and were identified as Ascaridia numidae based on microscopic morphology. Ribosomal DNA 18S and 28S D3 sequences of the nematode were deposited into GenBank and found to be most similar to Ascaridia galli and Toxocara vitulorum, respectively; sequences for A. numidae had not been previously reported. Treatment with piperazine sulfate significantly reduced the number of adult worms in the intestines, greatly decreased eggs per gram of feces, relieved clinical signs in the flock, and returned the flock mortality back to expected levels. All findings implicate A. numidae as the cause of elevated mortality in this flock.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Measuring the intra-individual variability of the plasma proteome in the chicken model of spontaneous ovarian adenocarcinoma.
- Author
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Hawkridge AM, Wysocky RB, Petitte JN, Anderson KE, Mozdziak PE, Fletcher OJ, Horowitz JM, and Muddiman DC
- Subjects
- Adenocarcinoma pathology, Animals, Chickens, Female, Humans, Mass Spectrometry methods, Ovarian Neoplasms pathology, Proteome analysis, Adenocarcinoma metabolism, Ovarian Neoplasms metabolism, Plasma metabolism, Proteome metabolism, Proteomics methods
- Abstract
The domestic chicken (Gallus domesticus) has emerged as a powerful experimental model for studying the onset and progression of spontaneous epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) with a disease prevalence that can exceed 35% between 2 and 7 years of age. An experimental strategy for biomarker discovery is reported herein that combines the chicken model of EOC, longitudinal plasma sample collection with matched tissues, advanced mass spectrometry-based proteomics, and concepts derived from the index of individuality (Harris, Clin Chem 20: 1535-1542, 1974). Blood was drawn from 148 age-matched chickens starting at 2.5 years of age every 3 months for 1 year. At the conclusion of the 1 year sample collection period, the 73 birds that remained alive were euthanized, necropsied, and tissues were collected. Pathological assessment of resected tissues from these 73 birds confirmed that five birds (6.8%) developed EOC. A proteomics workflow including in-gel digestion, nanoLC coupled to high-performance mass spectrometry, and label-free (spectral counting) quantification was used to measure the biological intra-individual variability (CV(W)) of the chicken plasma proteome. Longitudinal plasma sample sets from two birds within the 73-bird biorepository were selected for this study; one bird was considered "healthy" and the second bird developed late-stage EOC. A total of 116 proteins from un-depleted plasma were identified with 80 proteins shared among all sample sets. Analytical variability (CV(A)) of the label-free proteomics workflow was measured using a single plasma sample analyzed five times and was found to be ≥CV(W) in both birds for 16 proteins (20%) and in either bird for 25 proteins (31%). Ovomacroglobulin (ovostatin) was found to increase (p < 0.001) over a 6 month period in the late-stage EOC bird providing an initial candidate protein for further investigation.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Mycoplasma iowae associated with chondrodystrophy in commercial turkeys.
- Author
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Ley DH, Marusak RA, Vivas EJ, Barnes HJ, and Fletcher OJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Bacterial immunology, DNA, Bacterial genetics, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Hindlimb microbiology, Hindlimb pathology, Mycoplasma Infections microbiology, Mycoplasma Infections pathology, Mycoplasma iowae genetics, Mycoplasma iowae immunology, Poultry Diseases microbiology, Spine microbiology, Spine pathology, Turkeys, Cartilage pathology, Chondrocytes pathology, Mycoplasma Infections veterinary, Mycoplasma iowae isolation & purification, Poultry Diseases pathology
- Abstract
Opportunistic observations of and necropsies from selected commercial (meat) turkey flocks revealed skeletal lesions consistent with chondrodystrophy, characterized by leg and vertebral deformities, occurring at very low incidences in turkeys from two primary breeds and various multiplier breeder flocks. Mycoplasma organisms were cultured and identified as Mycoplasma iowae by immunofluorescence and polymerase chain reaction from some of the vertebral lesions but not from leg joints. This is the first detailed description of the gross and microscopic lesions of vertebral chondrodystrophy associated with M. iowae, which should now be considered in the differential diagnosis of turkeys with these lesions.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Parvovirus-associated cerebellar hypoplasia and hydrocephalus in day old broiler chickens.
- Author
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Marusak RA, Guy JS, Abdul-Aziz TA, West MA, Fletcher OJ, Day JM, Zsak L, and Barnes HJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Newborn, Brain pathology, Cerebellar Diseases pathology, Cerebellar Diseases virology, Hydrocephalus pathology, Hydrocephalus virology, Parvoviridae Infections pathology, Parvoviridae Infections virology, Parvovirus genetics, Phylogeny, Poultry Diseases pathology, Cerebellar Diseases veterinary, Chickens, Hydrocephalus veterinary, Parvoviridae Infections veterinary, Parvovirus isolation & purification, Poultry Diseases virology
- Abstract
Cerebellar hypoplasia and hydrocephalus were identified in day old broiler chickens showing nervous signs, impaired mobility, and diarrhea. At postmortem examination, brains of chickens were misshapen and cerebellums were smaller than normal. Microscopically, cerebellar folia were reduced in size and irregularly shaped, and the ventricles were widely distended. Affected cerebellums had focal areas along the base of folia where the internal granular cell layer had been lost, and Purkinje cells were disorganized and located within the molecular layer. Parvovirus DNA was detected by polymerase chain reaction in three of nine brains with oligonucleotide primers designed for amplification of chicken and turkey parvoviruses. On the basis of phylogenetic analyses, the detected virus was most closely related to chicken parvoviruses. These findings suggest that a chicken parvovirus might cause a neurologic disease of young chickens characterized by cerebellar hypoplasia and hydrocephalus; however, its role as the cause of the disease remains to be confirmed.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Pneumonia of turkey breeder hens associated with Mycoplasma synoviae.
- Author
-
Osorio C, Fletcher OJ, Abdul-Aziz T, Gonder E, Tilley B, and Ley DH
- Subjects
- Aging, Animals, Female, Lung pathology, Mycoplasma Infections microbiology, Mycoplasma Infections pathology, Pneumonia, Bacterial microbiology, Pneumonia, Bacterial pathology, Poultry Diseases pathology, Mycoplasma Infections veterinary, Mycoplasma synoviae, Pneumonia, Bacterial veterinary, Poultry Diseases microbiology, Turkeys
- Abstract
Turkey breeder hens showed an increase in mortality beginning at 38 wk of age with no other clinical signs or changes in egg production. While no respiratory signs were observed in live turkeys, those that died consistently had gross lesions of pneumonia. Histopathology of lungs revealed serofibrinous bronchopneumonia, lymphofollicular reaction, and other features suggesting a bacterial etiology. However, except for incidental findings, bacteria were not visualized in the sections examined, and none were isolated in meaningful numbers on routine bacteriologic media. At 42 wk of age the flock showed serologic evidence of infection with Mycoplasma synoviae (MS), and MS was identified by both mycoplasma culture and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) procedures in samples from choanal clefts and tracheas. Results of lung histopathology and PCR tests were consistent with a diagnosis of pneumonia caused by MS.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Comparative pathology of chickens experimentally inoculated with avian influenza viruses of low and high pathogenicity.
- Author
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Mo IP, Brugh M, Fletcher OJ, Rowland GN, and Swayne DE
- Subjects
- Animals, Chickens, Immunohistochemistry, Influenza A virus classification, Influenza A virus isolation & purification, Influenza in Birds mortality, Influenza in Birds physiopathology, Organ Specificity, Species Specificity, Turkeys, Virulence, Influenza A virus pathogenicity, Influenza in Birds pathology
- Abstract
Pathologic changes and distribution of viral antigen as determined by immunohistochemistry were compared among 4-wk-old specific-pathogen-free chickens inoculated intratracheally with avian influenza virus (AIV) isolates of either low or high pathogenicity. Viruses of low pathogenicity, previously characterized as mildly pathogenic (MP), included A/chicken/Pennsylvania/21525/83 (H5N2) (MP-Penn) and A/chicken/Alabama/7395/75 (H4N8) (MP-Alab). Viruses of high pathogenicity included A/chicken/Pennsylvania/1370/83 (H5N2), A/chicken/Victoria/A185/85 (H7N7), and A/turkey/Ontario/7732/66 (H5N9). Extremely variable clinical signs ranging from mild respiratory distress to high mortality were present among chickens inoculated with these viruses. Chickens inoculated with highly pathogenic (HP) virus had histologic lesions of necrosis and inflammation in cloacal bursa, thymus, spleen, heart, pancreas, kidney, brain, trachea, lung, and skeletal muscle, whereas chickens inoculated with MP virus had histologic lesions most frequently in lung and trachea or lacked histologic lesions. Immunospecific staining for avian influenza viral proteins was most common in cells within heart, lung, kidney, brain, and pancreas of chicken inoculated with HP viruses, but immunospecific staining was present only and infrequently in trachea and lung of chickens inoculated with MP-Penn AIV. MP-Alab did not produce lesions nor have viral antigen in inoculated chickens but did produce serologic evidence of infection. The pattern of organ involvement and viral antigen distribution in chickens intratracheally inoculated with HP AIV isolates indicates a common capability to spread beyond the respiratory tract and confirms the pantrophic replicative, pathobiologic, and lethal nature of the viruses. However, variability in severity and lesion distribution exists between different HP AIVs. By contrast, MP viruses had the ability to replicate in respiratory or enteric tracts or both and produce lesions within the respiratory tract. These MP viruses exhibited a restricted ability to replicate or produce lesions or both in nonrespiratory or nonenteric tissues; such effects were associated with only sporadic deaths.
- Published
- 1997
36. Veterinary medical research: a national resource.
- Author
-
Alden CL, Andrews EJ, Bowen JM, Fletcher OJ, Fulton RW, Kochevar D, Mather EC, Perryman LE, Schmitz JA, and Tennant BC
- Subjects
- Animal Welfare, Animals, Humans, Research Support as Topic, United States, Zoonoses, Research economics, Research standards, Research trends, Veterinary Medicine economics, Veterinary Medicine standards, Veterinary Medicine trends
- Published
- 1994
37. Diazinon toxicity in broilers.
- Author
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Hill DL, Hall CI, Sander JE, Fletcher OJ, Page RK, and Davis SW
- Subjects
- Aging, Animals, Autopsy, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Poisoning mortality, Poisoning pathology, Poultry Diseases mortality, Chickens, Diazinon toxicity, Poisoning veterinary, Poultry Diseases pathology
- Abstract
Ten 3-day-old chicks were submitted from a flock experiencing high mortality. Necropsy revealed lacrimation, diarrhea, pleural effusion, hemorrhage and ulceration of the proventriculus, and swollen, hemorrhagic livers. Numerous yellow granules were present in the crop. Assayed crop contents contained 39 ppm diazinon [O,O-diethyl O-(2-isopropyl-4-methyl-6-pyrimidyl)phosphorothioate]. The insecticide had been applied to the litter to control fire ants. The high mortality abated after new litter was added on top of the old litter. Diazinon toxicosis was traced to ingestion of diazinon-impregnated granules and was reproduced experimentally.
- Published
- 1994
38. Relationship of complement resistance and selected virulence factors in pathogenic avian Escherichia coli.
- Author
-
Wooley RE, Spears KR, Brown J, Nolan LK, and Fletcher OJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Chickens immunology, Drug Resistance, Microbial, Escherichia coli drug effects, Escherichia coli immunology, Escherichia coli Infections immunology, Escherichia coli Infections veterinary, Poultry Diseases immunology, Poultry Diseases microbiology, Virulence, Chickens microbiology, Complement System Proteins immunology, Escherichia coli pathogenicity
- Abstract
Complement resistance, antibiotic resistance profiles, and virulence profiles of 80 Escherichia coli isolates from the intestines of normal chickens (40 isolates) and chickens diagnosed as having colisepticemia (40 isolates) were compared. Differences were observed between the two groups for antibiotic resistance, siderophore production, presence of type 1 pili, complement resistance, motility, and size of plasmids. The systemic isolates were more likely to have siderophores and type 1 pili, and to be complement-resistant and motile than were the intestinal isolates. No differences between the two groups were observed for colicin production. Further comparison of the 10 most complement-resistant isolates from the systemic group and 10 most complement-sensitive isolates from the intestinal group revealed a correlation between an isolate's resistance to complement and its ability to kill embryos, express type 1 pili, and be motile. Virulence of avian E. coli strains appears to be correlated with complement resistance and the interaction of this resistance with the ability to produce type 1 pili and be motile.
- Published
- 1992
39. Characteristics of Salmonella spp. and Escherichia coli isolated from broiler flocks classified as "good" or "poor" producers.
- Author
-
Spears KR, Wooley RE, Brown J, Fletcher OJ, and Payeur JB
- Subjects
- Animals, Cecum microbiology, Chickens physiology, Colicins biosynthesis, Complement System Proteins immunology, Drug Resistance, Microbial, Escherichia coli drug effects, Escherichia coli genetics, Escherichia coli physiology, Hemagglutination, Hemolysis, Iron Chelating Agents metabolism, Plasmids, Salmonella drug effects, Salmonella genetics, Salmonella physiology, Siderophores, Chickens microbiology, Escherichia coli isolation & purification, Salmonella isolation & purification
- Abstract
Cecal samples from 100 broiler flocks were cultured for Escherichia coli and Salmonella. Samples were selected from flocks classified as either "good" or "poor" producers by a production formula. In an attempt to identify predictors of flock productivity, isolates were studied for differences in antibiotic resistances, hemagglutination of erythrocytes, production of colicins, production of siderophores, type of hemolysis, resistance to host complement, and presence of plasmids. S. typhimurium (copenhagen) was isolated from one poor producing flock and three good producers. Salmonella isolates showed no significant differences in the parameters studied. The E. coli isolates showed significant differences only for the presence of plasmids. These data indicate that differences in host intestinal E. coli from good and poor producing flocks do not predict flock productivity.
- Published
- 1990
40. The relationship of Cryptosporidium sp. infection of the bursa of Fabricius, intestinal tract, and respiratory system of chickens in Georgia, 1974-1988.
- Author
-
Goodwin MA, Brown J, and Fletcher OJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Bursa of Fabricius parasitology, Georgia epidemiology, Incidence, Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic epidemiology, Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic veterinary, Lung Diseases, Parasitic epidemiology, Lung Diseases, Parasitic veterinary, Retrospective Studies, Chickens parasitology, Cryptosporidiosis epidemiology, Poultry Diseases epidemiology, Turkeys parasitology
- Abstract
During 1974-1984, cryptosporidiosis was diagnosed in slightly more than 1% (63/6050 = 1.04%) of histopathology reports on chickens and turkeys made at two Georgia diagnostic laboratories. During 1985-1988, cryptosporidiosis was diagnosed in almost 6% (157/2622 = 5.99%) of histopathology reports on chickens and turkeys made at the two laboratories. Intestinal and respiratory Cryptosporidium sp. infections have increased significantly (p less than 0.01) with time. During the same period, there was no statistical pattern for bursa of Fabricius Cryptosporidium sp. infections, and there was no relationship between the incidence of bursal infections and the incidence of either respiratory or intestinal infections.
- Published
- 1990
41. Effects of dietary aflatoxin in aflatoxin-resistant and control lines of chickens.
- Author
-
Manning RO, Wyatt RD, Marks HL, and Fletcher OJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Body Weight drug effects, Chickens blood, Chickens growth & development, Diet, Female, Liver drug effects, Male, Mycotoxicosis prevention & control, Aflatoxins toxicity, Breeding, Chickens genetics, Mycotoxicosis veterinary
- Abstract
The resistance to a single oral dose (12 mg of aflatoxin per kg of BW) and 4 wk of dietary aflatoxin (2.5 mg per kg of feed) were investigated in chicks selected for five generations for resistance to acute aflatoxicosis (AR) and unselected control (C) chicks. The AR chicks were more resistant to a single oral dose of aflatoxin and had significantly decreased sodium pentobarbital sleeping time compared to C chicks. Four-weeks exposure to dietary aflatoxin did not result in any significant change in BW or feed conversion ratios of chicks from either the C or AR line. However, more sensitive indicators of aflatoxicosis including plasma total protein, albumin, cholesterol concentrations, and gamma glutamyl transferase activity were significantly altered in C chicks but not in AR chicks fed aflatoxin. Percentages of liver lipid and liver hyperplasia score were also significantly altered as a result of dietary aflatoxin treatment in C but not AR chicks. These data indicate that selection-associated differences exist between the C and AR lines of chickens that convey resistance to not only a single oral dose of aflatoxin but also to a more chronic dietary exposure to aflatoxin.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Effect of cold acclimation on the broiler chicks' resistance to dietary aflatoxin.
- Author
-
Manning RO, Wyatt RD, and Fletcher OJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Aspartate Aminotransferases blood, Blood Glucose analysis, Body Weight, Bursa of Fabricius pathology, Cold Temperature, Liver pathology, Male, Mycotoxicosis prevention & control, Organ Size, Phosphorus blood, Poultry Diseases immunology, Adaptation, Physiological, Aflatoxins poisoning, Chickens, Mycotoxicosis veterinary, Poultry Diseases chemically induced
- Abstract
The effect of acclimation to environmental temperatures of 10 to 12 or 28 to 30 C on the resistance of broiler chicks to dietary aflatoxin was examined. Broiler chicks were acclimated from day-of-age for 2 wk to environmental temperatures of 10 to 12 or 28 to 30 C. On Day 14, a single oral dose of aflatoxin (8 mg per kg of body weight) was administered to 50 chicks in each environment. An increase in aflatoxin resistance, as assessed by survival rate, was conveyed by acclimation to cold temperatures. In each environmental chamber, a separate group of chicks was maintained for 2 additional wk, but those groups received 5 mg of aflatoxin per kg feed. By the end of the study, aflatoxicosis was characterized by: 1) a significant (P less than or equal to .05) decrease in body weight; 2) increases in spleen weight, liver weight, liver lipid, and liver dry-matter content; 3) changes in the serum levels of total protein, albumin, glucose, cholesterol, uric acid, potassium, phosphorus, iron and calcium; and 4) increased hepatic hyperplasia. Acclimation to 10 to 12 C was characterized by: 1) an increase in body weight, liver weight, spleen weight and bursa weight; 2) changes in the serum glucose and potassium levels; and 3) a decrease in glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase activity. Significant aflatoxin by temperature interactions were evident only in serum levels of glucose and phosphorus, and in the serum activity of glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase. These data suggest that acclimation to cool temperatures does not play a significant role in the resistance by broiler chickens to chronic aflatoxin exposure.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Microcomputer-assisted morphometric analysis of airsacculitis caused by Mycoplasma gallisepticum in immunised and nonimmunised chickens.
- Author
-
Fletcher OJ, Fairchild SE, Smith FG, and Trampel DP
- Abstract
Inflammation caused by inoculation of Mycoplasma gallisepticum (MG) into the air sacs was compared in chickens previously exposed by intramuscular injection of MG with that produced in nonimmunised chickens. Air sacs from chickens inoculated with Frey's media, from those receiving only intramuscular injections of MG, and from nonimmunised non-challenged birds were included in the evaluations. The airsacculitis produced in immunised chickens was more severe at 48 hours post-challenge infection than that produced in nonimmune chickens. At 96 hours after challenge, the airsacculitis in nonimmunised chickens was significantly more severe than that produced in chickens of any other experimental group. The protective effect of immunisation at 96 hours was demonstrated clearly by using the techniques of ring-stabilisation for collection, processing, and embedding of air sacs and microcomputer-assisted morpho-metric analysis. Air sac wall thickness and area measurements correlated positively with subjective impressions on the degree of airsacculitis and with determinations made by point count analysis of the relative percentage of selected components of inflammation.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Tissue residues of dietary cadmium in wood ducks.
- Author
-
Mayack LA, Bush PB, Fletcher OJ, Page RK, and Fendley TT
- Subjects
- Animals, Body Weight drug effects, Cadmium toxicity, Diet, Dietary Proteins pharmacology, Tissue Distribution, Cadmium analysis, Ducks metabolism
- Abstract
One-week-old wood ducks were fed cadmium in diets containing 18 or 30% protein for a period of three months. Seven drakes from each group were sacrificed, and blood, brain, muscle, kidney, liver, and wing feather tissues were collected and analyzed for cadmium. Highest cadmium concentrations were found in the kidney, liver, and feather tissues; blood, muscle, and brain cadmium residue levels were undetectable. Except in the kidney tissue, protein level of the diet did not affect cadmium residue levels. For birds that were changed to a cadmium-free, high-protein ration at 13 weeks of age, regression analysis indicated a significant decrease in cadmium residue levels for the kidney tissue only. Growth, as measured by bodyweight at 13 weeks of age, was not affected by the various cadmium treatment levels. Histopathological examination revealed lesions in the kidney tissues of the 100 ppm cadmium treatment groups, which were more severe in those birds receiving the 18% protein diet. Vacuolation of the pancreatic acinar cells was observed in all groups, but tended to occur more frequently in the higher cadmium level groups.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Marek's disease virus-induced transient paralysis in chickens. 3. Differentiation of field cases from classical Marek's disease by central nervous system lesions.
- Author
-
Swayne DE, Fletcher OJ, Tyler DE, and Page RK
- Abstract
Vasculitis with intramural pseudocyst formation primarily in the cerebellar white matter, but also in nuclei of the medulla, resulted in leakage of IgG and albumin and vacuolation of the neuropil (vasogenic oedema) in brains from chickens with clinical signs of Marek's disease virus (MDV)-induced transient paralysis (TP). Demyelination was absent. Chickens that had recovered from TP had a restored blood-brain-barrier, indicated by the rarity of vasculitis and vascular intramural pseudocysts in the cerebellum. In addition, the vacuolation and protein leakage were greatly decreased. The minor vacuolation resulted primarily from intramyelinic (cytotoxic) oedema. The small quantity of extravascular protein was being removed by microglial cells and astrocytes. In one chicken which failed to fully recover from TP (TP-prolonged) there was neither vasogenic oedema, cytotoxic oedema, nor vasculitis in the cerebellum. The medulla of the TP-prolonged chicken had a severe lymphocytosis, swollen axons, neuronal degeneration, secondary demyelination and some associated serum protein leakage. All TP-affected and TP-recovered chickens, and the TP-prolonged chicken, had perivascular mononuclear cell cuffs within all brain sections. Chickens with classical Marek's disease (MD) generally lacked CNS vacuolation, perivascular mononuclear cell cuffs, vasculitis and serum protein leakage. However, in a few cases of MD with severe perivascular mononuclear cell cuffs, focal demyelinating plaques were seen. These plaques had associated vacuolation, serum protein leakage, axonal spheroids and neuronal degeneration.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Vaccination of day-old broilers against infectious bronchitis: effect of vaccine strain and route of administration.
- Author
-
Andrade LF, Villegas P, and Fletcher OJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Viral analysis, Coronaviridae Infections prevention & control, Vaccination veterinary, Chickens, Coronaviridae immunology, Coronaviridae Infections veterinary, Infectious bronchitis virus immunology, Poultry Diseases prevention & control, Viral Vaccines administration & dosage
- Abstract
Nine groups of 10 one-day-old broiler chicks were vaccinated by eye-drop, coarse spray, or intratracheal instillation with combined Newcastle disease-infectious bronchitis live vaccines containing the Massachusetts (Mass) 41, Holland 120, or Connecticut 46 strain of infectious bronchitis virus (IBV). Chickens vaccinated with Mass-41 or Holland 120 were protected against challenge with a Mass strain administered at 4 weeks of age. When immunity to the disease was evaluated by virus recovery, detection of IBV by fluorescent antibody, evaluation of ciliary activity, histopathology, and virus-neutralization titers, the group vaccinated with Connecticut 46 did not show protection. Vaccination at 1 day of age resulted in an antibody response and increased resistance to challenge with Mass-41, regardless of vaccination route.
- Published
- 1983
47. Subcutaneous clostridial infection in broilers.
- Author
-
Hofacre CL, French JD, Page RK, and Fletcher OJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Chickens, Clostridium Infections pathology, Edema microbiology, Enteritis veterinary, Infectious bursal disease virus analysis, Clostridium Infections veterinary, Edema veterinary, Poultry Diseases microbiology
- Abstract
A flock of 12,500 broilers 36 days of age experienced a sudden increase in mortality. Post-mortem lesions were emphysema, severe enteritis, and a serosanguineous fluid in the subcutaneous tissue of the breast and thighs; there was no evidence of a loss in the integrity of the skin. Clostridium perfringens and C. septicum were isolated from the affected subcutaneous tissue. Histopathological and serological examination indicated previous infection with infectious bursal disease virus. The subsequent immunosuppression and severe enteritis may have permitted the clostridia access to the circulatory system, with localization in the subcutaneous areas of the breast and thighs. Mortality returned to normal 48 hours after potassium penicillin G was administered via the drinking water.
- Published
- 1986
48. Dose response, prevention, and treatment of a transplantable lymphoid tumor.
- Author
-
Walser MM, Fletcher OJ Jr, and Brown J
- Subjects
- Animals, Avian Leukosis mortality, Avian Leukosis therapy, Immunization, Passive, Immunotherapy, Lymphocytes immunology, Transplantation, Homologous, Avian Leukosis immunology, Chickens, Neoplasm Transplantation
- Abstract
Transplantable lymphoid tumor (TLT) cells in doses ranging from 10(2.43) to 10(6.80) were transplanted into 3-week-old chicks. A total of 199 chicks in 31 dosage groups was included in this 2-year study. Overall mortality was nearly 100% and analysis of the results revealed no significant differences in mortality among the groups. A significant (P less than 0.001) linear relationship existed between log10 of the TLT cell dose and mean survival time. Serum obtained from chickens which survived TLT growth, regression, and challenge inoculation was administered to chicks 4, 7, or 11 days before TLT induction. Of the chickens in each of these 3 groups, 80 to 100% survived compared with 0 to 20% in those given control serum. In chicks with actively growing TLT that were treated with 2 injections of plasma from TLT-resistant chickens, mean survival time was lengthened and survival was increased by 36%. Lymphocytes from resistant chickens or plasma od and survival was increased by 36%. Lymphocytes from resistant chickens or plasma or lymphocytes from control chickens did not affect survival time or percentage of survival. In the present study, results demonstrated a similarity to the TLT model studied 30 years ago and established the usefulness of this model in the study of serum immunotherapy.
- Published
- 1977
49. A viral disease of fledgling budgerigars.
- Author
-
Davis RB, Bozeman LH, Gaudry D, Fletcher OJ, Lukert PD, and Dykstra MJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Kidney pathology, Liver pathology, Virus Diseases pathology, Bird Diseases pathology, Parakeets, Psittaciformes, Virus Diseases veterinary
- Abstract
Fledgling budgerigars from aviaries in Georgia and Texas were reported to have high rates of mortality. Affected birds died acutely and exhibited abdominal distention and reddening of the skin. Postmortem lesions were hydropericardium, enlarged heart and liver with areas of necrosis, and swollen, congested kidneys. Histologic examination of a variety of tissues revealed cells with enlarged nuclei containing inclusions. Electron micrographs revealed the presence of viral particles 42 to 49 nm in diameter in the nuclei of epithelial cells of the renal tubule.
- Published
- 1981
50. Diagnostic summary of 1986 turkey, broiler breeder, and layer necropsy cases at the University of Georgia.
- Author
-
Morris MP and Fletcher OJ
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Animals, Arthritis, Infectious epidemiology, Arthritis, Infectious pathology, Arthritis, Infectious veterinary, Chickens, Female, Georgia, Hemorrhagic Septicemia epidemiology, Hemorrhagic Septicemia pathology, Osteomalacia epidemiology, Seasons, Staphylococcal Infections epidemiology, Synovitis epidemiology, Synovitis pathology, Synovitis veterinary, Turkeys, Hemorrhagic Septicemia veterinary, Osteomalacia veterinary, Pasteurella Infections veterinary, Poultry Diseases epidemiology, Staphylococcal Infections veterinary
- Abstract
Turkey, broiler breeder, and layer cases submitted for necropsy in 1986 to the University of Georgia were categorized by diagnosis, grouped by clinical features, season, age, and presenting history, and evaluated for statistically significant patterns. The most commonly diagnosed diseases were: fowl cholera in turkeys, 64 cases (34.4% of cases; 26.2% of diagnoses); staphylococcal arthritis/synovitis (SA/S) in broiler breeders, 35 cases (20.7%; 17.7%); and osteomalacia in layers, 17 cases (21.0%; 15.6%). In turkeys, fowl cholera, colibacillosis, and aspergillosis were significantly more common in the fourth, second, and third quarters of the year, respectively; enteritis and viral enteritis were more common in early grow-out, and osteomyelitis, SA/S, and synovitis were greatest in late grow-out. Overall, musculoskeletal problems in turkeys were more common in the third quarter and were less common in the first and fourth quarters. Erysipelas occurred most frequently in turkeys 50 to 112 days of age. In both broiler breeders and layers, SA/S was more common in the second quarter, and a history of musculoskeletal problems was less common in both post-peak-production broiler breeders and layers. Fowl pox was more common in the fourth quarter and in late-production broiler breeders. In layers, osteomalacia and Marek's disease were more common in the first and fourth quarters, respectively.
- Published
- 1988
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