Nutritional parameters associated with enteric Escherichia coli and rotavirus in poults

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1983
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Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Abstract

Experiments were conducted to investigate the effects of E. coli and rotavirus as causative agents in producing infectious stunting syndrome of poults. The syndrome, as it occurs commercially, was characterized in two experiments to produce decreased digestible dry matter and nitrogen as well as increased excreta nitrogen and gross energy content of affected poults. The effects of E. coli and rotavirus on the nutritional performance of poults were compared to the commercial syndrome by digestibility trials and assay of intestinal mucosaI enzyme activities.

The strain of E. coli used in these experiments was isolated from the yolk sac of stunted poults. Inoculation of day-old poults was done orally in one experiment and via the yolk sac in another series of experiments. Experiments were designed in a factorial arrangement of E. coli inoculation and dietary protein level (28 vs. 22%). Oral administration of the pathogenic E. coli at a low dose (.1 ml of a 10⁻² dilution of a 24-hr culture) to day-old poults produced a significant increase in feed efficiency by 21 days of age for birds fed either 28 or 22°0 protein diets. In this case, E. coli apparently was established as part of the normal intestinal microflora of the turkey without producing a toxic response. Similar concentrations of E. coli (10⁻³ and 10⁻² dilutions) inoculated into the yolk sac of day-old poults resulted in significant mortality and morbidity. The lower dilution (10⁻³) produced the desired response of stunted poults without substantial mortality. Body weight gain and feed consumption were severely decreased by E. coli inoculation at both levels of protein (28 or 22%). The 28% protein diet alleviated the reduction in feed consumption for birds infected with the lower concentration of E. coli. The 10⁻² dilution caused substantial mortality and similar responses on body weight at both levels of protein. A malabsorption of nutrients accompanied E. coli infection in spite of reduced feed consumption as indicated by increased excreta nitrogen and gross energy content for all infected poults.

In three experiments, rotavirus was orally inoculated into poults over 21 days of age previously fed either 28 or 22% protein diets. The response of rotavirus was variable in the three experiments, however, the low protein diet (22%) increased the poults susceptibility to rotavirus infection. Serum antibodies to rotavirus were detected in all poults tested prior to inoculation. Ubiquitous in nature, rotavirus appears to produce clinical signs of infection in combination with stress on the poults. Effects of rotavirus on digestibility parameters were inconclusive. In experiments with either rotavirus or E. coli, activities of intestinal mucosal enzymes were found to vary more between poults within a treatment than by any effect of the various treatments.

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