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Early Lesions of Proliferative Enteritis in Pigs...
Journal article

Early Lesions of Proliferative Enteritis in Pigs and Hamsters

Abstract

Gnotobiotic pigs and conventional hamsters were given suspensions of intestinal mucosa from a pig with proliferative hemorrhagic enteropathy and killed 10 or 21 days later. Affected animals had evidence of marked proliferation of immature enterocytes in the intestinal crypts. Numerous Campylobacter-like organisms were in the cytoplasm of enterocytes, and in some instances, bacteria were closely associated with enterocytes. Some intracellular bacteria lying below the microvillous border were within membrane-bound structures. Immunofluorescence and electron immunogold staining with specific antibodies indicated that these organisms were antigenically different from curved bacteria in the crypt lumen of early lesions. This study indicates that the life cycle of the intracellular organisms may involve entry into crypt enterocytes from the intestinal lumen with subsequent intracellular multiplication.

Authors

McOrist S; Lawson GHK; Rowland AC; MacIntyre N

Journal

Veterinary Pathology, Vol. 26, No. 3, pp. 260–264

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication Date

May 1, 1989

DOI

10.1177/030098588902600311

ISSN

0300-9858
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