Abstract

Pigs infected with Salmonella are an important source of contamination at slaughterhouses. We characterized the distribution, virulence genotypes and antimicrobial-resistance phenotypes for Salmonella isolates that were collected from different stages of a pork production chain. Each of ten pig lots were sampled for feed (n = 10), water (n = 10), barn floor (n = 10), lairage floor (n = 10), mesenteric lymph nodes (n = 100), tonsils (n = 100), processing environment (n = 120), pork cuts (n = 40) and carcasses after bleeding (n = 100), after singeing (n = 100), after evisceration (n = 100), and after final rinsing (n = 100). Salmonella was isolated according to ISO 6579, and after confirmation the isolates were subjected to serogrouping, macro-restriction digests and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), detection of virulence-related genes and antimicrobial-resistance phenotyping. Salmonella was recovered from barn floors from 3 pig farms (3/10), lairage floors (7/10), carcasses after bleeding (2/100) and final washing (1/100), palatine tonsils (45/100), mesenteric lymph nodes (43/100), utensils (3/120) and cuts (4/40). The most prevalent serogroup was O: 4 (82%) followed by O:3 (7.7%); O:9 (5.1%); O:8 (2.6%) and O:7 (2.6%). Recovered strains (n = 109) were classified into 24 different pulsotypes (XbaI restriction digest), which were arranged into five different clusters. Fourteen different virulence genotypes were observed based on 15 loci, and all isolates were positive for invA, sitC, pagC and tolC. There was a high prevalence of antimicrobial resistance against streptomycin (90.5%), tetracycline (88.1%), ampicillin (81.0%), chloramphenicol (71.4%), and ciprofloxacin (50.0%). No strain was resistant to ertapenem, meropenem or kanamycin. A majority (80.9%) of isolates were considered multidrug resistant (resistant to ≥3 antibiotic classes). This study provides valuable insight about the epidemiology of Salmonella in swine production, and despite the low presence of this pathogen in carcasses and meat cuts, the majority of isolates was multidrug resistant.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.