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Intended for healthcare professionals
Volume 31 Issue 3, May 2019

Volume 31 Issue 3, May 2019

Special Section on Backyard Poultry Diseases

Focus issue on backyard flocks

  • Aslı Mete
  • Grant Maxie
Free accessOtherFirst published May 14, 2019pp. 317

Focus Issue

  • Kyran J. Cadmus
  • Aslı Mete
  • Macallister Harris
  • Doug Anderson
  • Sherrill Davison
  • Yuko Sato
  • Julie Helm
  • Lore Boger
  • Jenee Odani
  • Martin D. Ficken
  • Kristy L. Pabilonia
Abstract
A comprehensive understanding of common diseases of backyard poultry flocks is important to providing poultry health information to flock owners, veterinarians, and animal health officials. We collected autopsy reports over a 3-y period (2015–2017) from ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published May 14, 2019pp. 318–326
  • Nancy M. Brochu
  • Michele T. Guerin
  • Csaba Varga
  • Brandon N. Lillie
  • Marina L. Brash
  • Leonardo Susta
Abstract
In Ontario, within the past few years, there has been a marked increase in the number of non-commercial poultry flocks (referred to as “small flocks”). Small poultry flocks may act as a reservoir of avian and zoonotic pathogens, given the flocks’ limited ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published April 11, 2019pp. 327–335
  • Nancy M. Brochu
  • Michele T. Guerin
  • Csaba Varga
  • Brandon N. Lillie
  • Marina L. Brash
  • Leonardo Susta
Abstract
Non-commercial poultry flocks (referred to as “small flocks”) have become increasingly popular in Canada. Despite this popularity, little is known about the main causes of morbidity and mortality (health status) in these flocks. We assessed the baseline ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published April 11, 2019pp. 336–342
  • Pompei Bolfa
  • John J. Callanan
  • Jenifer Ketzis
  • Silvia Marchi
  • Trista Cheng
  • Hieuhanh Huynh
  • Tiffany Lavinder
  • Kenneth Boey
  • Clare Hamilton
  • Patrick Kelly
Abstract
Free-roaming chickens on Caribbean islands are important sentinels for local avian diseases and those introduced by birds migrating through the Americas. We studied 81 apparently healthy unvaccinated free-roaming chickens from 9 parishes on St. Kitts, an ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published April 11, 2019pp. 343–349
  • Julia Blakey
  • Simone Stoute
  • Beate Crossley
  • Aslı Mete
Abstract
Infectious laryngotracheitis (ILT) can cause severe losses in backyard flocks (BYFs) and commercial poultry. The prevalence of ILT, the circulating strains of ILT virus (ILTV) in BYFs, and the correlation of disease in BYF and commercial operations, is ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published April 11, 2019pp. 350–358
  • Arya Sobhakumari
  • Sabine A. Hargrave
  • Ashley E. Hill
  • Robert H. Poppenga
Abstract
Backyard layer chickens may be exposed to a variety of metals in the environment, including lead. The potential public health concerns associated with lead exposure prompted us to systematically screen liver samples from backyard layers submitted to the ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published July 20, 2018pp. 359–363
  • Kristin A. Clothier
  • Andrea Torain
  • Steve Reinl
Abstract
Infectious coryza is a severe respiratory disease of chickens associated with large economic losses in affected commercial flocks. The fastidious causative pathogen, Avibacterium paragallinarum, is difficult to recover and identify, resulting in delayed ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published April 11, 2019pp. 364–367
  • Anny S. Huang
  • Francisco R. Carvallo
  • Maurice E. Pitesky
  • Simone Stoute
  • Aslı Mete
Abstract
In contrast to conventional commercial poultry, which are raised primarily in controlled indoor environments, backyard poultry are typically raised in less restricted settings, potentially exposing them to a greater variety of ingestible substances, ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published April 11, 2019pp. 368–370
  • Simone T. Stoute
  • Daral J. Jackwood
  • Beate M. Crossley
  • Linda O. Michel
  • Julia R. Blakey
Abstract
Pathogenic strains of infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) are associated with increased morbidity, mortality, and immunosuppression in susceptible chickens. Backyard poultry is increasing in popularity in the United States, but very little is known ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published April 4, 2019pp. 371–377
  • Dayna A. Goldsmith
  • Aslı Mete
  • Joseph B. Pesavento
  • John M. Adaska
Abstract
Pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (PAP) is a disease of surfactant clearance in which functional abnormalities in alveolar macrophages lead to accumulation of surfactant within alveoli in mammals. Histologic examination of 6 avian autopsies, including 4 ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published February 8, 2019pp. 378–381
  • Nicholas P. Ilchyshyn
  • Paola Monti
Abstract
Cell structures morphologically consistent with Blastocystis were aspirated from a subcutaneous facial swelling in a 13-mo-old pet duck. On PCR analysis and sequencing, the organism was confirmed as Blastocystis sp. subtype 7. Blastocystis is a single-...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published July 20, 2018pp. 382–384
  • Brittany McHale
  • Anibal G. Armién
  • Lorelei L. Clarke
  • Daniel R. Rissi
Abstract
Embryonal central nervous system (CNS) tumor is a rare malignant neoplasm that arises from the neural crest. Herein we describe an embryonal tumor in the brain of an adult male domestic goose (Anser anser) that was euthanized after a short history of ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published September 11, 2018pp. 385–389
  • Julia Blakey
  • Manuela Crispo
  • Arthur Bickford
  • Simone Stoute
Abstract
Pasteurella multocida is the causative agent of fowl cholera, an economically important disease of commercial and backyard poultry. Turkeys are particularly susceptible to fowl cholera; both backyard and commercial turkeys can succumb to disease. On April ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published January 13, 2019pp. 390–394
  • Vincent J. Tavella
  • Jessica N. Walters
  • Lisa M. Crofton
  • Tanya LeRoith
Abstract
A 5-y-old backyard Araucana–Americana rooster was presented to the regional diagnostic laboratory with a history of progressive lethargy and respiratory signs. Autopsy revealed a single large mass of testicular origin in the coelomic cavity, causing ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published March 12, 2019pp. 395–398

Full Scientific Reports

  • Michael S. Filigenzi
  • Emily E. Graves
  • Lisa A. Tell
  • Karen A. Jelks
  • Robert H. Poppenga
Abstract
We developed and validated a liquid chromatography–high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) analytical method for quantitatively measuring pesticide concentrations in small-body avian tissue samples using homogenized 1–2-d-old chicken carcasses as the ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published March 11, 2019pp. 399–407
  • Na-Yon Kim
  • Jaehoon An
  • Jae-Kyung Jeong
  • Sumin Ji
  • Sung-Hyun Hwang
  • Hong-Seok Lee
  • Myung-Chul Kim
  • Hyun-Wook Kim
  • Sungho Won
  • Yongbaek Kim
Abstract
Glycated hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) is widely used for monitoring and diagnosing human diabetes mellitus, but is rarely used in veterinary clinics. The goal of our study was to validate the commercial HbA1c testing system SD A1cCare analyzer (Bionote, Gyeoggi-...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published February 18, 2019pp. 408–414
  • Xiangfen Yuan
  • Jizhou Lv
  • Xiangmei Lin
  • Chunyan Zhang
  • Junhua Deng
  • Caixia Wang
  • Xiaopan Fan
  • Yonggui Wang
  • Hui Xu
  • Shaoqiang Wu
Abstract
Advances in molecular testing and microfluidic technologies have opened new avenues for rapid detection of animal viruses. We used a centrifugal microfluidic disk (CMFD) to detect 6 important swine viruses, including foot-and-mouth disease virus, ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published April 4, 2019pp. 415–425
  • Natalia Jiménez-Zucchet
  • Tamara Alejandro-Zayas
  • Christian A. Alvarado-Macedo
  • María Renée Arreola-Illescas
  • Lissette Benítez-Araiza
  • Lilian Bustamante-Tello
  • Danilo Cruz-Martínes
  • Nayeli Falcón-Robles
  • Luz Garduño-González
  • María Concepción López-Romahn
  • Ana Michelle Martínez-Taylor
  • Adriana Mingramm-Murillo
  • Carlos Ortíz
  • Antonio L. Rivera-Guzmán
  • Rocío Sabater-Durán
  • Angélica Sánchez-Jiménez
  • Roberto Sánchez-Okrucky
  • Lydia Staggs
  • Raúl Torres-Salcedo
  • María Vences-Fernández
  • Bert Rivera-Marchand
  • Antonio A. Mignucci-Giannoni
Abstract
Urinalysis is a rapid, simple, inexpensive, and reliable test that documents urine abnormalities reflecting various types of renal, hormonal, or metabolic diseases. Urinalysis could assist proper monitoring of the health of dolphins under human care; ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published April 4, 2019pp. 426–433
  • Panpicha Sattasathuchana
  • Naris Thengchaisri
  • Jan S. Suchodolski
  • Jonathan A. Lidbury
  • Jörg M. Steiner
Abstract
Studies that have used serum 3-bromotyrosine (3-BrY) to investigate eosinophil activation in dogs have found elevated 3-BrY levels in clinical patients with chronic enteropathy (CE). To our knowledge, a method to measure 3-BrY concentrations in feces has ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published February 15, 2019pp. 434–439
  • Laura Puig
  • Gemma Castellá
  • F. Javier Cabañes
Abstract
Malassezia pachydermatis is part of the normal microbiota of canine skin and external ear canal, and is also associated with otitis externa in dogs. Laboratory detection of Malassezia otitis relies on the presence of elevated numbers of the yeast on ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published April 4, 2019pp. 440–447

Brief Communications

  • Noa Berlin
  • Efrat Kelmer
  • Gilad Segev
  • Itamar Aroch
  • Gal Kelmer
Abstract
Coagulopathies in horses are common and potentially life-threatening. In equine field medicine, a portable point-of-care (POC) prothrombin time (PT) testing device could be useful to identify early changes in extrinsic clotting. The CoaguChek-XS (Roche ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published March 11, 2019pp. 448–452
  • Gayle C. Johnson
  • William H. Fales
  • Brian M. Shoemake
  • Pamela R. Adkins
  • John R. Middleton
  • Fred Williams, III
  • Mike Zinn
  • W. Jeff Mitchell
  • Michael J. Calcutt
Abstract
Mycoplasmosis is a well-known cause of morbidity and mortality in small ruminants. Previously recognized outbreaks have involved arthritis, and pneumonia or pleuropneumonia. Modern bacteriology procedures rely less on isolation techniques that require ...
Free accessBrief ReportFirst published March 11, 2019pp. 453–457
  • Carolyn Cray
  • Roxanne I. Knibb
  • Jeffrey R. Knibb
Abstract
Tools to measure the acute-phase response have been utilized widely in veterinary medicine. Evaluation by plasma protein electrophoresis (PPEP) has become an increasingly common assay in veterinary clinical pathology. Commercial reagents for serum amyloid ...
Free accessBrief ReportFirst published March 11, 2019pp. 458–462
  • Shelley J. Newman
  • Olufemi O. Fasina
Abstract
We report meconium aspiration in 2 sibling goat kids, and characterize the expected lesions of aspiration pneumonia in conjunction with the rare lesion of otitis media. Grossly, the lungs were multifocally consolidated, and there was yellow-green exudate ...
Free accessBrief ReportFirst published March 11, 2019pp. 463–466
  • Arno Wünschmann
  • Aníbal G. Armién
  • April L. Childress
  • James F. X. Wellehan
  • Federico Giannitti
Abstract
Two male juvenile central bearded dragons (Pogona vitticeps) were submitted for postmortem examination after dying at their respective homes. Dragon 1 had marked hemopericardium with restrictive epicarditis. The inner aspect of the distended pericardial ...
Free accessBrief ReportFirst published February 22, 2019pp. 467–470
  • Pierre Becker
  • Anne-Cécile Normand
  • Gerty Vanantwerpen
  • Mia Vanrobaeys
  • Roel Haesendonck
  • Francis Vercammen
  • Dirk Stubbe
  • Renaud Piarroux
  • Marijke Hendrickx
Abstract
Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) has emerged as a reliable method to identify fungal isolates. The success of this approach relies on the availability of exhaustive databases, but the latter were ...
Free accessResearch articleFirst published April 4, 2019pp. 471–474
  • Qingmei Li
  • Li Wang
  • Yaning Sun
  • Jinling Liu
  • Fansu Ma
  • Jifei Yang
  • Dong Zhao
  • Yuhang Zhang
  • Jun Luo
  • Junqing Guo
  • Ruiguang Deng
  • Gaiping Zhang
Abstract
We evaluated an immunochromatographic strip for the detection of avian avulavirus 1 (Newcastle disease virus, NDV) based on a high-affinity monoclonal antibody (mAb) that specifically recognizes the hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) protein. The anti-HN ...
Free accessBrief ReportFirst published April 11, 2019pp. 475–480
  • Mohammad M. Obaidat
  • Alaa E. Bani Salman
Abstract
We estimated the seroprevalence of, and associated risk factors for, anaplasmosis in dairy cows, sheep, and goats in all regions of Jordan. Apparently healthy animals from 135 farms (31 cow, 68 sheep, and 36 goat farms) were tested for Anaplasma spp. ...
Free accessBrief ReportFirst published April 11, 2019pp. 481–484
  • Megan C. Romano
  • Hung K. Doan
  • Robert H. Poppenga
  • Michael S. Filigenzi
  • Uneeda K. Bryant
  • Cynthia L. Gaskill
Abstract
Diagnosing mushroom poisoning in dogs can be difficult and often includes identification of suspect mushrooms. Visual identification may be hindered by mastication, oral medications, or poor quality of environmental mushroom samples. Other analytical ...
Free accessBrief ReportFirst published April 8, 2019pp. 485–487
  • Yoshihiro Shimoji
  • Makiko Bito
  • Kazumasa Shiraiwa
  • Yohsuke Ogawa
  • Sayaka Nishikawa
  • Masahiro Eguchi
Abstract
The surface protective antigen (Spa) protein of Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae is an important component in protecting pigs against swine erysipelas. The Spa protein has been antigenically divided into 3 types: SpaA, SpaB, and SpaC. Swine erysipelas ...
Free accessBrief ReportFirst published March 11, 2019pp. 488–491

Book Review

Free accessBook reviewFirst published May 14, 2019pp. 492