Literature DB >> 22380811

Salmonella enterica shedding in hospitalized horses and associations with diarrhea occurrence among their stablemates and gastrointestinal-related illness or death following discharge.

Amanda K Hartnack1, David C Van Metre, Paul S Morley.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the potential association between Salmonella enterica shedding in hospitalized horses and the risk of diarrhea among stablemates, and to characterize gastrointestinal-related illness and death following discharge among horses that shed S. enterica while hospitalized.
DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study [corrected]. ANIMALS: 221 horses (59 that shed S. enterica during hospitalization and 162 that tested negative for S. enterica shedding ≥ 3 times during hospitalization). PROCEDURES: Information from medical records (signalment, results of microbial culture of fecal samples, clinical status at the time of culture, and treatment history) was combined with data collected through interviews with horse owners regarding formerly hospitalized horses and their stablemates. Data were analyzed to investigate risk factors for death and diarrhea.
RESULTS: Occurrence of diarrhea among stablemates of formerly hospitalized horses was not associated with S. enterica shedding in hospitalized horses but was associated with oral treatment with antimicrobials during hospitalization. Salmonella enterica shedding during hospitalization was not associated with risk of death or gastrointestinal-related illness in study horses ≤ 6 months after discharge, but shedding status and history of gastrointestinal illness were associated with increased risk of death during the preinterview period. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Stablemates of horses that shed S. enterica during hospitalization did not appear to have an increased risk for diarrhea, but comingling with horses that receive orally administered antimicrobials may affect this risk. Salmonella enterica shedding during hospitalization may be a marker of increased long-term risk of death after discharge. Risks are likely influenced by the S enterica strain involved and biosecurity procedures used.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22380811     DOI: 10.2460/javma.240.6.726

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Vet Med Assoc        ISSN: 0003-1488            Impact factor:   1.936


  1 in total

1.  Faecal microbiota characterisation of horses using 16 rdna barcoded pyrosequencing, and carriage rate of clostridium difficile at hospital admission.

Authors:  Cristina Rodriguez; Bernard Taminiau; Bastien Brévers; Véronique Avesani; Johan Van Broeck; Aurélia Leroux; Marjorie Gallot; Antoine Bruwier; Hélene Amory; Michel Delmée; Georges Daube
Journal:  BMC Microbiol       Date:  2015-09-16       Impact factor: 3.605

  1 in total

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