Hye-Ryoung Kim, Hye-Soon Song, Il Jang, Tuyet Ngan Thai, Hyeon-Su Kim, Yong-Kuk Kwon, Moon Her
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Fowl adenovirus (FAdV) is an infectious pathogen causing economic loss to the poultry industry worldwide. Nationwide surveillance was performed to determine the prevalence and distribution of FAdV with 725 samples collected from145 broiler farms in South Korea. A total of 64 strains were identified using PCR and phylogenetic analysis based on a sequence of hexon gene; 23 of the 64 were FAdV-11/D, 19 were FAdV-5/B, and 12 were FAdV-8b/E. FAdV-1/A and FAdV-8a/E were three strains, respectively; only one strain of FAdV-2/D was detected, and there was no FAdV-4/C. FAdV was detected very frequently at 44.1% of 145 farms, but inclusion body hepatitis (IBH) diagnosed by microscopy was confirmed in 13.8%. Poultry productivity was compared between farms with a single disease or noninfection and farms with multiple infectious diseases such as colibacillosis, antigenic variant infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) infection, infectious bronchitis, and/or IBH. Coinfection of three or more diseases, including IBH, variant IBDV infection, and infectious bronchitis, had a more deleterious effect on poultry productivity. This study provides that prevalence of various species of FAdV and distribution with other diseases and highlights the need for comprehensive measures against multiple diseases concurrently affecting the broiler in South Korea.
期刊介绍:
Transboundary and Emerging Diseases brings together in one place the latest research on infectious diseases considered to hold the greatest economic threat to animals and humans worldwide. The journal provides a venue for global research on their diagnosis, prevention and management, and for papers on public health, pathogenesis, epidemiology, statistical modeling, diagnostics, biosecurity issues, genomics, vaccine development and rapid communication of new outbreaks. Papers should include timely research approaches using state-of-the-art technologies. The editors encourage papers adopting a science-based approach on socio-economic and environmental factors influencing the management of the bio-security threat posed by these diseases, including risk analysis and disease spread modeling. Preference will be given to communications focusing on novel science-based approaches to controlling transboundary and emerging diseases. The following topics are generally considered out-of-scope, but decisions are made on a case-by-case basis (for example, studies on cryptic wildlife populations, and those on potential species extinctions):
Pathogen discovery: a common pathogen newly recognised in a specific country, or a new pathogen or genetic sequence for which there is little context about — or insights regarding — its emergence or spread.
Prevalence estimation surveys and risk factor studies based on survey (rather than longitudinal) methodology, except when such studies are unique. Surveys of knowledge, attitudes and practices are within scope.
Diagnostic test development if not accompanied by robust sensitivity and specificity estimation from field studies.
Studies focused only on laboratory methods in which relevance to disease emergence and spread is not obvious or can not be inferred (“pure research” type studies).
Narrative literature reviews which do not generate new knowledge. Systematic and scoping reviews, and meta-analyses are within scope.