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Colonization of rabbits with Staphylococcus aureus in flocks with and without chronic staphylococcosis.
Authors:K Hermans  P De Herdt  L A Devriese  W Hendrickx  C Godard  F Haesebrouck
Institution:Department of Pathology, Bacteriology and Poultry diseases, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Ghent, Merelbeke, Belgium. katleen.hermans@rug.ac.be
Abstract:Rabbits of 19 rabbitries were examined for the presence of Staphylococcus aureus in nine different body sites. Seven rabbitries experienced epidemically spreading signs of staphylococcosis while the other 12 rabbitries did not. S. aureus was isolated in all seven flocks that suffered from chronic problems of staphylococcosis and in 11 of the 12 clinically healthy flocks. The mean percentage of infected animals in these two groups was 90 and 43.3%, respectively. S. aureus was isolated from all body sites examined, but the ear and the perineum were often more intensely colonized. The number of animals colonized with S. aureus and the mean number of positive body sites in S. aureus positive rabbits were significantly higher in rabbitries with chronic staphylococcosis. This indicates that colonization capacity of S. aureus plays a role in epidemically spreading disease in rabbits. S. aureus isolates belonged to five different biotypes and 23 different phage types. Several different types simultaneously circulated in contaminated rabbitries and even simultaneously infected individual rabbits. Strains that belonged to the biotype-phage type combination mixed CV-C, 3A/3C/55/71 only occurred in rabbitries chronically dealing with signs of staphylococcosis. This may indicate a relationship between phenotypic strain properties and virulence of S. aureus.
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