Intestinal populations of Lactobacilli and coliforms after in vivo Salmonella dublin challenge and their relationship with microbial translocation in calves supplemented with lactic acid bacteria and lactose

Autor: R. Rodríguez Armesto, María Virginia Zbrun, G.J. Sequeira, Marcelo Signorini, Lorena P. Soto, Laureano Sebastian Frizzo, Marcelo Raúl Rosmini, Ezequiel Bertozzi
Rok vydání: 2011
Předmět:
Zdroj: Animal Feed Science and Technology. 170:12-20
ISSN: 0377-8401
DOI: 10.1016/j.anifeedsci.2011.07.016
Popis: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the relationship between intestinal microbial populations and bacterial translocation in young calves supplemented with lactic acid bacteria (LAB) and lactose and experimentally infected with Salmonella dublin DSPV 595T. Fifteen calves were divided into three groups (a control group, a group inoculated with LAB, and a group inoculated with LAB and lactose), with 5, 6 and 4 animals each, were used. The LAB inoculum, composed of Lactobacillus casei DSPV 318T, L. salivarius DSPV 315T and Pediococcus acidilactici DSPV 006T was administered together with the milk replacer. The groups inoculated with LAB and LAB and lactose received a daily dose of 109CFU/kg body weight of each strain throughout the experiment. Lactose was provided in doses of 100g/d. The administration of the pathogen was performed on all animals on day 11 of the experiment with 2×1010CFU. The levels of probiotic inoculum found in the large intestine of the animals from the two groups inoculated with the probiotic [0] were of 5log10CFU/g, whereas those in the small intestine were of 5log10CFU/g in the animals inoculated with LAB and lactose, and approximately 1log10CFU/g less in the group inoculated with LAB. The levels of Salmonella in both, the small and large intestines, were between 3log10CFU/g and 4log10CFU/g. High microbial loads were found in the internal organs. Lactobacillus spp. were found only in the lymph nodes of the two groups inoculated with the probiotic, in very low amounts (
Databáze: OpenAIRE