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Experimental observations on the pathogenesis of necrobacillosis.

Abstract
Earlier studies showed that the minimum infective dose (greater than 10(6) organisms) of a virulent strain of Fusobacterium necrophorum could be greatly reduced by suspending the fusobacteria in sub-lethal doses of cultures of other bacteria such as Escherichia coli before inoculating mice subcutaneously. In the present study the infective dose of the same strain of F. necrophorum was reduced by a factor of greater than 10(3) by suspending the fusobacteria in sub-lethal doses of 5% homogenate of gaur or wallaby faeces. Sterile faecal filtrate had no such effect. The sites of low grade infection produced by the prior subcutaneous injection of E. coli culture or gaur faecal suspension were susceptible to superinfection by doses of F. necrophorum far below those required to infect normal tissue. This work helps to explain the production of necrobacillosis by the faecal contamination of small wounds. It proved impossible, however, to produce necrobacillosis in mice by the subcutaneous injection of faecal suspensions from 33 farm cattle. This suggests that the proportion of cattle with virulent F. necrophorum in their faeces is low.
AuthorsG R Smith, L M Wallace, D E Noakes
JournalEpidemiology and infection (Epidemiol Infect) Vol. 104 Issue 1 Pg. 73-8 (Feb 1990) ISSN: 0950-2688 [Print] England
PMID2307186 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Topics
  • Animals
  • Feces (microbiology)
  • Fusobacterium Infections (etiology)
  • Fusobacterium necrophorum (pathogenicity)
  • Macropodidae
  • Mice
  • Ruminants

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