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IMMUNOLOGY, HEALTH, AND DISEASE: Research Note |

* USDA, ARS, Russell Research Center, Athens, GA 30605; and
Department of Poultry Science, University of Georgia, Athens 30602
1 Corresponding author: ncox{at}saa.ars.usda.gov
Two studies were conducted to determine whether Campylobacter jejuni could rapidly spread and reside in the internal organs of adult broiler breeder hens. In Study 1, university-housed broiler breeders at 22 wk of age were obtained and placed in individual cages. Each hen was intravaginally inoculated weekly from 23 to 32 wk of age with a characterized strain of C. jejuni. At wk 23, 27, and 32, 4 d postinoculation, the hens were euthanized, defeathered, and aseptically opened. In Study 2, university-housed broiler breeder hens were obtained at 42, 53, and 56 wk of age, placed in individual cages, and inoculated either orally or intravaginally with a characterized strain of C. jejuni. To reduce the possibility of cross-contamination among samples, the thymus, spleen, liver, and gallbladder were aseptically removed, prior to the ceca. In both studies, all samples were individually analyzed. In Study 1, at 23 wk of age, C. jejuni was recovered from 4/7 thymii, 2/7 spleens, 5/7 livers and gallbladders, and 6/7 ceca. At 27 wk of age, C. jejuni was recovered from 1/7 thymii and 1/7 ceca. At 32 wk of age, C. jejuni was recovered from 4/11 thymii, 1/11 livers and gallbladders, and 2/11 ceca. In Study 2, C. jejuni was recovered from 2/6 thymii and 5/6 ceca after oral inoculation and 1/6 spleens, 1/6 livers and gallbladders, and 4/6 ceca after vaginal inoculation of 43-wk-old hens. Campylobacter jejuni was recovered from 2/5 thymii, 3/5 spleens, 3/5 livers and gallbladders, and 2/5 ceca after oral inoculation of 53-wk-old hens and 1/5 thymii and 1/5 livers and gallbladders after vaginal inoculation. Campylobacter jejuni was recovered from 1/4 thymii, 2/4 livers and gallbladders, and 1/4 ceca and was not detected in any vaginally inoculated birds of 57-wk-old hens. This study provides evidence that C. jejuni can reside in the internal organs of broiler breeder hens following oral or intravaginal inoculation.
Key Words: Campylobacter jejuni broiler breeder thymus liver and gallbladder spleen
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