Literature DB >> 10371006

Susceptibility of local Nigerian and exotic chickens to infectious bursal disease by contact exposure.

J O Okoye1, E P Aba-Adulugba, R C Ezeokonkwo, S C Udem, L J Orajaka.   

Abstract

One hundred 6-week-old susceptible cockerels were inoculated with a pathogenic strain of infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) and kept in the same pen as 100 each of 6-week-old pullets, local chickens and broilers. The cockerels developed depression and diarrhoea on day 3 post inoculation (PI) and most of the pullets and some of the local chickens and broilers showed similar signs on day 4 PI. Loss in weight was severe and similar in the pullets and local chickens, being significantly greater than that in the broilers from days 3-11 PI. The total mortality was 85%, 66.7%, 30% and 20% for the pullets, cockerels, local chickens and broilers, respectively. The lesions were more severe in the pullets and local chickens than in the broilers. IBDV antigen and antibody were detected, respectively, in all the bursal and serum samples from the infected chickens tested. The contact exposure method used in this study simulates better what happens in nature than inoculation with IBDV. The reduced mortality observed among the local chickens, compared with that (61.5%) seen in earlier studies using intraocular inoculation of IBDV, may have been due to behavioural differences that tend to result in their ingesting a relatively low dose of the virus.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10371006     DOI: 10.1023/a:1005159522203

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Trop Anim Health Prod        ISSN: 0049-4747            Impact factor:   1.559


  5 in total

1.  Recovery of virus from feces and tissues of chickens infected with cell-culture-adapted infectious bursal disease virus.

Authors:  K Takase; F Nonaka; T Fukuda; S Yamada
Journal:  Nihon Juigaku Zasshi       Date:  1982-04

2.  Infectious bursal disease in the Sudan.

Authors:  A Salman; M A Shuaib; T H Suleiman; M Ginawi
Journal:  Trop Anim Health Prod       Date:  1983-11       Impact factor: 1.559

3.  Comparative study of the resistance or susceptibility of local Nigerian and exotic chickens to infectious bursal disease.

Authors:  J O Okoye; E P Aba-Adulugba
Journal:  Avian Pathol       Date:  1998       Impact factor: 3.378

4.  Genetic differences in susceptibility of chicken lines to infection with infectious bursal disease virus.

Authors:  N Bumstead; R L Reece; J K Cook
Journal:  Poult Sci       Date:  1993-03       Impact factor: 3.352

5.  An outbreak of infectious bursal disease among chickens between 16 and 20 weeks old.

Authors:  J O Okoye; M Uzoukwu
Journal:  Avian Dis       Date:  1981 Oct-Dec       Impact factor: 1.577

  5 in total
  1 in total

1.  Pullets had higher bursal and thymic weight indices and more antibody response to La Sota vaccination than broiler chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus).

Authors:  Amarachukwu O Igwe; John I Ihedioha; Didacus C Eze; John O A Okoye
Journal:  Vet Med Sci       Date:  2019-12-10
  1 in total

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