2020 journal article

Research Note: Horizontal transmission and internal organ colonization by Salmonella Enteritidis and Salmonella Kentucky in experimentally infected laying hens in indoor cage-free housing

POULTRY SCIENCE, 99(11), 6071–6074.

co-author countries: United States of America 🇺🇸
author keywords: Salmonella Enteritidis; Salmonella Kentucky; laying hens; cage-free housing; internal organs
MeSH headings : Animals; Chickens; Disease Transmission, Infectious / veterinary; Female; Housing, Animal; Poultry Diseases / microbiology; Poultry Diseases / transmission; Salmonella; Salmonella Infections, Animal / microbiology; Salmonella Infections, Animal / transmission; Salmonella enteritidis
Source: Web Of Science
Added: December 21, 2020

The transmission of Salmonella to humans via contaminated eggs is an international public health concern. S. Enteritidis is deposited inside eggs after colonizing reproductive tissues of infected hens. Diverse housing facility characteristics and flock management practices influence Salmonella persistence and transmission in poultry, but the food safety consequences of different housing systems for laying hens remain unresolved. The present study compared the horizontal transmission of infection and invasion of internal organs during the first 2 wk after experimental S. Enteritidis and S. Kentucky infection of laying hens in indoor cage-free housing. Groups of 72 hens were housed in isolation rooms simulating commercial cage-free barns, and 1/3 of the hens in each room were orally inoculated with either S. Enteritidis (2 rooms) or S. Kentucky (2 rooms). At 6 d and 12 d postinoculation, 12 inoculated and 24 contact-exposed hens in each room were euthanized, and samples of liver, spleen, ovary, oviduct, and intestinal tract were removed for bacteriologic culturing. All orally inoculated hens were positive for intestinal colonization by S. Enteritidis at 6 d postinfection, and 70.8% of contact-exposed hens had become colonized by 12 d. S. Enteritidis was isolated from 100% of livers and 50.0% of ovaries from inoculated birds at 6 d and from 41.7% of livers and 10.4% of ovaries from contact-exposed birds at 12 d. The majority of both orally inoculated and contact-exposed hens were positive for intestinal colonization by S. Kentucky at 6 d, but S. Kentucky was found in other internal organs of both inoculated and contact-exposed hens significantly (P < 0.05) less often than S. Enteritidis at both sampling intervals. These results indicate that Salmonella infection can spread rapidly and extensively among hens in cage-free indoor housing, including a high frequency of internal organ involvement for invasive S. Enteritidis.