A longitudinal study of Salmonella enterica infections in high- and low-seroprevalence finishing swine herds in the Netherlands

P.J. van der Wolf, Danilo Lo Fo Wong, W.B. Wolbers, A.R.W. Elbers, H.M.J.F. van der Heijden, F.W. van Schie, W.A. Hunneman, P. Willeberg, M.J.M. Tielen

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

The purpose of this investigation was to study the incidence and course of Salmonella infections in finishing pig herds in order to asses the stability of a given Salmonella herd status. Five low- and 7 high-seroprevalence herds were followed for seven sampling rounds. Each round, blood and faecal samples were tested in an indirect ELISA and by bacteriological culturing, respectively. In high-seroprevalence herds a positive Salmonella status was an indication of a long-term problem and the status was relatively stable over time. The herds experiencing clinical salmonellosis were not necessarily the herds with the highest seroprevalence. It is possible to deliver seronegative finishers to the slaughterhouse, even though these pigs were seropositive as growers. In three out of five low-prevalence herds, major infection incidents occurred, indicating that changes in the Salmonella status should be anticipated. Low-prevalence herds can remain negative over a longer period of time as a result feeding a complete liquid feed containing fermented by-products.
Original languageEnglish
JournalVeterinary Quarterly
Volume23
Issue number3
Pages (from-to)116-121
ISSN0165-2176
Publication statusPublished - 2001

Keywords

  • monitoring
  • Salmonella enterica subsp enterica
  • bacteria
  • ELISA
  • pig

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