• Title/Summary/Keyword: Pig rectal stricture

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Rectal stricture in a finishing swine : Case

  • Seol, Min-Sug;Hur, Boo-Hong;Kiku Matsuda;Lim, Chae-Woong;Song, Hee-Jong
    • Korean Journal of Veterinary Service
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    • v.24 no.4
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    • pp.375-377
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    • 2001
  • Rectal stricture occurred in 2 finishing pigs submitted for necropsy from Moguchon, the meat processing plant, chonbuk. Grossly, the wall of the rectum was harden and thickened by fibrous tissue. Anteriro to the stricture, the descending colon was dilated up to 30cm in diameter, filled with gas and pasty green fluidal feces. Histologically, the epithelia of rectal mucosa were necrotized. The mucosa and submucosa of rectum were infiltrated by macrophages, eosinophils and lymphocytes. This infiltration was the most extensive in the deeper layer of submucosa and intensive fibrosis was observed in deeper submucosa layer. This case is report for rectal stricture of finishing pig.

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Serotyping and antibiotic susceptibility of Salmonella species from pigs with rectal stricture found in slaughterhouses (도축장 출하 직장협착 돼지에서 분리된 살모넬라균 혈청형 및 항생제 감수성)

  • Jiyeon Kim;Jinju Gwak;Doori Seo;Jaegi Lee;Daewoong Lim;Hana Kim;Jiyeong Park;Jongwoog Choi;Byeongcheol Yoon
    • Korean Journal of Veterinary Service
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    • v.46 no.2
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    • pp.137-145
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    • 2023
  • From November 2021 to October 2022, 151 pigs were discarded due to the suspected salmonellosis, when assessed by antemortem inspection at slaughterhouses in Gwangju. Among them, 85 cases shown with the rectal stricture were confirmed to be infected with Salmonella spp, when assessed by postmortem inspection and Salmonella-oriented culture in the laboratory, accounting for 56.3% of the carcass discard cases. Salmonella spp. were isolated in 58 cases (68.2%) out of 85 total discard cases. As for serotyping of the Salmonella isolates, 28 cases (48.3%) belonged to serogroup B and 28 cases (48.3%) belonged to serogroup C, those were the most frequent isolates, and 2 cases (3.4%) belonged to serogroup E. The most prevalent serotype was Rissen (39.7%), followed by I4,[5],12:i:-(37.9%), Derby (8.6%), Bareilly (5.2%), Infantis (3.4%), Give (3.4%), and Typhimurium (1.7%). The 58 isolates of salmonellae showed resistance to tetracycline (63.8%), chloramphenicol (56.9%), ampicillin (53.4%), and ampicillin-sulbactam (51.7%). S. Rissen showed resistance to chloramphenicol (82.6%), ampicillin (52.2%), ampicillin-sulbactam (52.2%), and tetracyclin (47.8%). S. I4,[5],12:i:-was resistant to tetracycline (90.9%), ampicillin (81.8%), ampicillin-sulbactam (77.3%), and chloramphenicol (59.1%). Among the isoates, S. Bareilly (3 strains), S. Infantis (2 strains), S. Give (2 strains), S. Rissen (3 strains), and S. I4,[5],12:i:- (1 strain) showed no resistance to the tested antimicrobials. As for the prevalence of the antibiotic resistance pattern, AM-SAM-TE-C was the most common, which was shown in 15.5% of S. Rissen. At second, the resistance pattern was occurred as AM-SAM-TE (12.1%) and AM-SAM-CF-CZ-FOX-CTX-NA-TE-C (12.1%), respectively in the case of S. I4,[5],12:i:-.