| Literature DB >> 26419321 |
D L Hanson1, G H Loneragan1, T R Brown2, D J Nisbet2, M E Hume2, T S Edrington2.
Abstract
We set out to investigate whether Salmonella enterica could be recovered from various tissues of viable neonatal calves immediately following parturition. Eleven samples were aseptically collected from each of 20 calves and consisted of both left and right subiliac and prescapular lymph nodes (LN), mesenteric LN, spleen and liver, as well as intestinal tissue (including luminal contents) from the small intestine, caecum, spiral colon and rectum. In addition, a faecal sample was collected from 19 of the dams. Salmonella was recovered from at least one sample from 10 of the 20 neonates. Across all calves, Salmonella was recovered from 12·7% of all samples and from LN in particular, Salmonella was recovered from 10·0%, 5·0%, and 5·0% of subiliac, prescapular, and mesenteric LN, respectively. Within calves, Salmonella was recovered from 0% to 73% of samples and across tissues, estimates of Salmonella prevalence were greatest in the caecum (30%) but was never recovered from the right pre-scapular LN. These data provide evidence of vertical transmission from a dam to her fetus such that viable calves are born already infected and thereby not requiring faecal-oral exposure for transmission. This new knowledge ought to challenge - or at least add to - existing paradigms of Salmonella transmission dynamics within cattle herds.Entities:
Keywords: Epidemiology; Salmonella; zoonoses
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26419321 PMCID: PMC4825103 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268815002241
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Fig. 1.Percentage of calves by the number of tissue samples from which Salmonella was recovered; error bars represent 95% confidence limits.
Fig. 2.Observed prevalence of Salmonella by calf tissue type; error bars represent 95% confidence limits.