Abstract |
To assess the rabbit as a model for the study of Johne's disease pathogenesis, a breeding group of adult and juvenile New Zealand white rabbits were orally challenged with three doses of the Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis wildtype bovine strain, CLIJ623, on three occasions. Faecal culture, post-mortem tissue bacteriological culture and histopathology were used to monitor the disease progression in the rabbits for more than 2 years. Of 4 adult and 16 juvenile orally dosed rabbits M. paratuberculosis organisms were recovered bacteriologically from two and three animals, respectively, using the BACTECtrade mark radiometric culture system. Tissue sites from which the bacteria were recovered included the mesenteric lymph nodes, ileocaecal valve, vermiform appendix, caecum, proximal colon and jejunum. Body weight loss, reduced abdominal fat and mild lesions were observed at necropsy in four infected rabbits. Diarrhoea and persistent faecal shedding of bacteria were not observed. Faecal culture did not yield any cultivable mycobacterial organisms on solid media.
|
Authors | J A Vaughan, C Lenghaus, D J Stewart, M L Tizard, W P Michalski |
Journal | Veterinary microbiology
(Vet Microbiol)
Vol. 105
Issue 3-4
Pg. 207-13
(Feb 25 2005)
ISSN: 0378-1135 [Print] Netherlands |
PMID | 15708817
(Publication Type: Journal Article)
|
Topics |
- Administration, Oral
- Animals
- Colony Count, Microbial
(veterinary)
- Disease Models, Animal
- Disease Progression
- Feces
(microbiology)
- Female
- Male
- Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis
(growth & development)
- Organ Specificity
- Paratuberculosis
(microbiology, pathology)
- Rabbits
- Weight Loss
|