Affiliation:
1. Research and Development, Merial Limited, Duluth, Georgia
2. Department of Veterinary Preventive Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio
3. Department of Population Health and Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina
Abstract
ABSTRACT
This study investigated the roles of various environmental sources, such as truck-washing systems, waste-processing lagoons, and other sources, as potential contributors to the exposure and dissemination of
Salmonella
in commercial swine production systems. Four cohorts of nursery age swine herds which originated from distinct farm flows were selected. In addition, cross-sectional sampling of four truck wash stations selected based on the types of disinfectants and sources of water used for sanitizing trucks were tested.
Salmonella
isolates were recovered from pigs (feces, cecal contents, and mesenteric lymph nodes) and environmental sources (barn floor, lagoon, barn flush, trucks, and holding pens). Antimicrobial susceptibility testing and genotyping were conducted using Kirby-Bauer disk diffusion and amplified fragment length polymorphism, respectively.
Salmonella
prevalence significantly increased with age from late nursery to slaughter for all of the cohorts (
P
= 0.007). In two of three instances, all three pig holding pens (lairage) sampled at processing were
Salmonella
positive. The predominant antibiotypes for all sources included ACSSuT (51.8%), SSuT (16.8%), T (6%), and pansusceptible (7.4%). For the isolates obtained at the farms, the ACSSuT phenotype was 5.6 times more likely to be found in the animals than in the environment (95% confidence interval, 4.4 to 7.2 times). Serogroup B was the most common serogroup (79%), followed by serogroup E (10.4%). Despite the fact that the four production flows were independent, 1 of the 11 genotypic clusters (cluster A1) was commonly detected in any type of sample regardless of its origin. Five of the genotypic clusters (clusters A3, A4, A5, A6, and A7) contained isolates that originated from trucks and lairage swabs and also from cecal contents and/or mesenteric lymph nodes. More interestingly, genotypic clusters A3, A4, and A6 (but not clusters A5 and A7) were not detected on the farms. They originated from the trucks and lairage swabs and then were identified from the cecal contents and/or mesenteric lymph nodes. These findings underscore the significance of various environmental factors, including inadequate truck-washing systems, and emphasize the role of lairage contamination by
Salmonella
that has food safety significance.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Reference37 articles.
1. Molecular Characterization of an Antibiotic Resistance Gene Cluster of
Salmonella typhimurium
DT104
2. Davies, P., F. Bovee, J. Funk, W. Morrow, F. Jones, and J. Deen. 1998. Isolation of Salmonella serotypes from feces of pigs raised in a multiple-site production system. J. Am. Vet. Med. Assoc.212:1925-1929.
3. Funk, J., P. Davies, and W. Gebreyes. 2001. Risk factors associated with Salmonella enterica prevalence in three-site swine production systems in North Carolina, USA. Berl. Muench. Tieraerztl. Wochenschr.114:335-338.
4. Futagawa-Saito, K., S. Hiratsuka, M. Kamibeppu, T. Hirosawa, K. Oyabu, and T. Fukuyasu. 2008. Salmonella in healthy pigs: prevalence, serotype diversity and antimicrobial resistance observed during 1998-1999 and 2004-2005 in Japan. Epidemiol. Infect.136:1118-1123.
5. Multidrug-Resistant
Salmonella enterica
Serovar Muenchen from Pigs and Humans and Potential Interserovar Transfer of Antimicrobial Resistance