Abstract

This study characterized the cell population recovered by respiratory-tract lavage of 57 two-week-old and 59 six-week-old specific-pathogen-free chickens as a prerequisite to study the response of the avian respiratory tract to infectious agents. The respiratory tract of each bird was lavaged through the trachea with a series of three lavages of 10 ml of room-temperature, neutral phosphate-buffered saline per lavage. The three lavages per bird were pooled for analysis. Total recovery volumes were measured, lavage fluid cellularity was determined, and a 200-cell differential count of non-erythrocyte cells was performed. Lavage fluid recovery was greater from 2-week-old birds (91.3 percent) than from 6-week-old birds (86.3 percent). Total cells recovered were greater for 6-week-old chickens (6.79 x 10(5)) than for 2-week-old chickens (5.03 x 10(5)). Cells of epithelial origin included squamous cells, goblet cells, and both ciliated and non-ciliated columnar epithelial cells. Cells of non-epithelial origin consisted of heterophils, lymphocytes, macrophages, eosinophils, basophils, and erythrocytes. Cells of epithelial origin were the predominant cell type recovered from the 2-week-old chickens, followed by heterophils. In 6-week-old chickens, heterophils were the predominant cell type recovered, followed by cells of epithelial origin. In descending order of prevalence, the remainder of cell types recovered from chickens of both ages were lymphocytes, macrophages, eosinophils, and basophils.

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