Mycoplasma gallisepticum in pheasants and the efficacy of tylvalosin to treat the disease.

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Citation

Forrester CA, Bradbury JM, Dare CM, Domangue RJ, Windsor H, Tasker JB, Mockett AP

Mycoplasma gallisepticum in pheasants and the efficacy of tylvalosin to treat the disease.

Avian Pathol. 2011 Dec;40(6):581-6. doi: 10.1080/03079457.2011.618822.

PubMed ID
22107092 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Infectious sinusitis, a common condition seen in adult pheasants, is primarily caused by Mycoplasma gallisepticum. The aims of the present study were to investigate the pathogenicity of M. gallisepticum in 14-day-old pheasants and evaluate the macrolide antibiotic tylvalosin (TVN) as a treatment for infectious sinusitis. The minimum inhibitory concentration of TVN for five isolates of M. gallisepticum taken from pheasants confirmed their susceptibility to TVN (range: 0.002 to 0.008 microg/ml). One of the isolates (G87/02) was inoculated intranasally into 72 pheasants (two groups of 36) at 14 days of age. Eight days later, when 18/72 (25%) of the pheasants showed clinical signs, one group was treated with 25 mg TVN/kg bodyweight daily in drinking water for three consecutive days. An uninfected, unmedicated control group (n=12) was also included. In contrast to the uninfected control group, a range of clinical signs typical of infectious sinusitis with varying severity was observed in challenged birds and M. gallisepticum was re-isolated from the infraorbital sinus and the eye/conjunctiva at necropsy, 22 days post challenge. In comparison with untreated birds, medication with TVN significantly reduced clinical signs and the re-isolation/detection of M. gallisepticum (P

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