Interaction of chicken anaemia virus and Cryptosporidium baileyi in experimentally infected chickens
Autor: | Cs. N. Drén, J.F Heijmans, L. Békési, I. Varga, Sándor Hornok, M. Dobos‐Kovács, H.W Peek |
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Rok vydání: | 1998 |
Předmět: |
Male
Anemia animal diseases medicine.medical_treatment Antibodies Protozoan Cryptosporidiosis Thymus Gland Antibodies Viral Lymphocyte Activation Virus Serology parasitic diseases medicine Animals Circoviridae Infections Parasite Egg Count Poultry Diseases General Veterinary biology Inoculation Cryptosporidium Immunosuppression General Medicine biology.organism_classification medicine.disease Virology Hematocrit Concomitant Antibody Formation Parasitology Chicken anaemia virus Chickens Chicken anemia virus |
Zdroj: | Veterinary Parasitology. 76:43-55 |
ISSN: | 0304-4017 |
DOI: | 10.1016/s0304-4017(97)00046-0 |
Popis: | The natural occurrence of concomitant chicken anaemia virus (CAV) and Cryptosporidium baileyi infection was described earlier. In this experiment, 1-day-old chickens were infected with CAV alone (anaemia virus infected, AI) or followed by inoculation with 8×105 C. baileyi oocysts orally at 1 wk of age (anaemia virus and Cryptosporidium infected, ACI). Another group of chickens received the same dose of C. baileyi oocysts without previous virus infection (Cryptosporidium infected, CI), and two groups of uninfected chickens served as controls. Except one group (uninfected control, UC), all groups — including the other control group (challenged control, CC) — were challenged with an oral inoculum of 8×105 C. baileyi oocysts at the age of 4 wk. Haematological, serological, immunohistochemical and pathological findings confirmed the effect of the virus agent. The individual C. baileyi oocyst shedding did not show significant difference between group CI and ACI, however, after challenge infection the AI chickens shed approximately three times more C. baileyi oocysts than those in group CC. Mortality and the percentage of birds that developed anaemia was significantly higher among ACI than AI chickens, while haematocrit values at 2 wk of age and relative bursal weights at 4 wk of age were moderately lower in the ACI group. The results presented here suggest that concurrent CAV infection increases the reproductive potential of C. baileyi in chickens, and both pathogens have synergistic effect on each other. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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