Publication | Closed Access
Studies of Avian Urolithiasis Associated with an Infectious Bronchitis Virus
28
Citations
16
References
1987
Year
Diagnostic VirologyAllergyViral DiagnosticsInfectious Bronchitis VirusPoultry DiseasePathogenesisVeterinary SciencePathologyVirologyInfectious Respiratory DiseaseAvian Urolithiasis SyndromeRespiratory InfectionMedicineAnimal VirusSegmental AtrophyPoultry Science
Avian urolithiasis syndrome was diagnosed in 14-to-25-week-old chickens from a multiple-age caged-layer complex housing more than 2.5 million chickens. Losses from this syndrome ranged from 0.5 to 1.0% per week. Seven-to-14-week-old pullets from this facility had multifocal renal tubular necrosis leading to interstitial fibrosis, tophus formation, and tubular dilation. A coronavirus was isolated in embryos inoculated with pooled samples of trachea, kidney, and cecal tonsil of 4-week-old pullets. This virus, identified as 85-209, was related to infectious bronchitis virus strain Florida 88 by hemagglutination-inhibition assay. Day-old specific-pathogen-free chicks were inoculated with fifth-embryo-passage amnioallantoic fluid containing this virus. These chicks developed histologic lesions of tracheitis at 5 to 7 days postinoculation. Half the chicks inoculated by eyedrop developed renal tubular necrosis after 7 days. Urolithiasis in the flock investigated was attributed to renal damage by this strain of infectious bronchitis virus occurring in 4-to-7-week-old pullets and progressing to segmental atrophy, hyperplasia, and ureteral stone formation in 14-to-25-week-old chickens.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1