Occurrence and sequence type of antimicrobial resistant Salmonellaspp. circulating in antibiotic-free organic pig farms of northern-Thailand
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Creator Phacharaporn Tadee
Title Occurrence and sequence type of antimicrobial resistant Salmonellaspp. circulating in antibiotic-free organic pig farms of northern-Thailand
Contributor PakpoomTadee, Prapas Patchanee, Ben Pascoe, Samuel K. Sheppard, Dethaloun Meunsene, Tunyamai Buawiratlert
Publisher Chulalongkorn University
Publication Year 2564
Journal Title The Thai Journal of Veterinary Medicine
Journal Vol. 51
Journal No. 2
Page no. 311
Keyword Salmonella, organic farming, antimicrobial, multilocus sequence typing, Thailand
URL Website https://he01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/tjvm/index
Website title https://he01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/tjvm/index
ISSN 0125-6491
Abstract Salmonellais one of the major foodborne pathogens, often as the result of pork consumption. Currently, with the situation of antimicrobial resistance, organic farming has been suggested as an alternative for healthier options. However, there is little evidence to support this. In this study, we investigated the occurrence of Salmonellacirculating in local organic pig farms in northern Thailand and typed isolated clones to better understand the population structure and transmission dynamics of the underlying Salmonellacontamination. In total, 112 samples from 11 organic pig farms were processed from October to December 2018. Salmonellawas detected in 9 targeted farms. One-fourth (28/112) of all samples yield Salmonella. The positives proportion of fecal, feeder swabs, and boot swabs were found to be 32.7% (17/53), 17.7% (6/34), and 20.0% (5/25), respectively. Of the 28 positive strains, Seven Salmonellaserotypes were identified, with S. Rissen being the most common (15/28; 53.6%). 89.3% (25/28), 78.6% (22/28) and 71.4% (20/28) of isolated Salmonellaresisted against tetracycline, ampicillin, and sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim, respectively.From multilocus sequence typing (MLST) analysis, the phylogenetic tree hinted that cross contamination within herds, point mutation of the housekeeping genes at period persisted in a herd, and sharing routes of supply chain between farms. A minimum spanning tree (MST) revealed that Salmonellacontamination in organic pig farming is possibly linked with conventional farming. Based on the own results, strictly highly organic practices provide a safe alternative enhancing domestic consumer trust and improve public health safety.
Faculty of Veterinary Science, Chulalongkorn University

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