Prevalence and characterization of Pasteurella multocida in rabbits and their environment in Japan.

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Abstract

Prevalence and some properties of Pasteurella multocida in rabbits kept at laboratory animal facilities and commercial rabbitries, and in their environment were investigated. A total of 1,147 nasal swab samples from 1,147 rabbits and 126 samples from their environment were subjected to the isolation of P. multocida. The bacteria were isolated from 199 (29.8%) of 668 rabbits in laboratory animal facilities and from 1 (0.2%) of 479 rabbits in the rabbitries. Isolation rate of P. multocida was low (0.9%) or high (44.9%) in the facilities with or without the monitoring for the presence of the bacteria, respectively. The highest rate of the isolation from rabbits was recorded at 10 to 12 months of their housing time. Thirty-nine cultures (31.0%) of air and the surfaces of floors, tips of water bottles, and cages were positive for P. multocida and isolation rate of the bacteria was high (78.6%) in the air. Biological and biochemical properties of the isolates were identical except for indole production and raffinose fermentation. The isolates were susceptible to antibiotics tested except for clindamycin, serologically similar in the gel-diffusion precipitin test and weakly virulent for mice. The present results suggested that these P. multocida isolates were the causal agent of rabbits rhinitis (snuffles) in Japan.

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Kawamoto, E., Sawada, T., & Maruyama, T. (1990). Prevalence and characterization of Pasteurella multocida in rabbits and their environment in Japan. Nippon Juigaku Zasshi. The Japanese Journal of Veterinary Science, 52(5), 915–921. https://doi.org/10.1292/jvms1939.52.915

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