Abstract

The pathogenic role of Rhodococcus equi in pigs remains controversial. Small numbers of pigs were inoculated intravenously (i.v.), or intramuscularly (i.m.) around the mouth, with a virulent, an intermediately virulent, or an avirulent strain of R. equi and killed 14 days later. None showed clinical signs other than transient fever and weight loss. The virulent and intermediately virulent strains were recovered in culture from various organs and lymph nodes of pigs inoculated i.v., but only from the mandibular lymph nodes of pigs inoculated i.m. The avirulent strain was not recovered from any site. None of the pigs developed macroscopically visible lesions, but they showed reactive hyperplasia of the mandibular lymph nodes. The latter contained scattered phagocytic cells, which were labelled immunohistochemically for virulence-associated antigens (15- to 17-kDa antigens or 20-kDa antigen). Intermediately virulent and virulent strains of R. equi were isolated from mandibular lymph nodes of 5.5% of apparently healthy abattoir pigs (n = 1615). Virulence-associated antigens were detected in phagocytic cells of culture-positive nodes, but the latter showed no lesions other than reactive lymphoid hyperplasia. The results would seem to question the pathogenic role of R. equi in pigs, and it is speculated that the organism survives in the lymph nodes without causing pathognomonic lesions.

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