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1.
Avian Pathol ; 29(4): 311-7, 2000 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19184820

ABSTRACT

Three very severe episodes of Escherichia coli infection in hens from the same farm, at the beginning of laying, are reported. They were characterized by no clinical signs, but sudden mortality, from 5 to 10%, with severe lesions of septicaemia and fibrinous polyserositis. A Gram-negative bacterium was consistently isolated in pure culture from tissues. Isolates were typed biochemically as E. coli, but they were lactose negative and non-motile. The serotyping tests typed the isolates as somatic group O111. The isolates were sensitive to enrofloxacin, amoxycil and colimycin, and partially sensitive to flumequine, all of which were used for therapy. The disease was reproduced experimentally in both specific pathogen free chickens and commercial layers by intramuscular inoculation of the E. coli, but only in some layers when inoculated by the oro-nasal route. The stress of the onset of lay seemed to be the most probable precipitating cause of the disease.

2.
Avian Pathol ; 27(6): 591-6, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18484048

ABSTRACT

The results of in vitro tests for induction of antibiotic resistance in some strains of Mycoplasma gallisepticum are reported. The number of passages required to induce resistance varied considerably between different antibiotics. In two groups of tests, with different strains of M. gallisepticum, resistance (>/= 1 mg/ml) to streptomycin appeared after two to three passages, to erythromycin and spiramycin after five to eight passages, to tylosin after nine to eleven and to enrofloxacin after eight to ten passages. With chlortetracycline the increase in resistance was very low (no more than ten times the starting minimal inhibitory concentration). Cross-sensitivity tests using strains with induced resistance to the different antibiotics demonstrated that those which were resistant to tylosin were also resistant to other macrolides ( > 1 mg/ml), whereas strains made resistant to erythromycin and spiramycin appeared only less sensitive (2 to 200 mug/ml) to tylosin in comparison with the original strains. Streptomycin, chlortetracycline and enrofloxacin induced very little or no cross-resistance.

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