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Prevalence and Sources of Salmonella Lymph Node Infection in Special-Fed Veal Calves

Peripheral lymph nodes (LNs) have been implicated as potential contaminants of ground beef, yet the source and timing of Salmonella LN infection in cattle is still unclear, limiting targeted intervention. The aim of this study was to leverage the vertical integration of special-fed veal production t...

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Published in:Journal of food protection 2022-06, Vol.85 (6), p.906-917
Main Authors: Locke, Samantha R, Pempek, Jessica A, Meyer, Rachel, Portillo-Gonzalez, Rafael, Sockett, Donald, Aulik, Nicole, Habing, Gregory
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description Peripheral lymph nodes (LNs) have been implicated as potential contaminants of ground beef, yet the source and timing of Salmonella LN infection in cattle is still unclear, limiting targeted intervention. The aim of this study was to leverage the vertical integration of special-fed veal production to identify preharvest environmental exposures, specifically in livestock trailers and harvest facility holding pens where calves spend 30 min to 4 h, that result in Salmonella LN infection. Ten cohorts of 80 to 82 veal calves were followed through the harvest process, and environmental samples were collected in barns, trailers, and holding pens. Mesenteric LNs from 35 calves were collected at harvest, and 25 prefemoral LNs per cohort were pooled. Within the same cohort, for 12 samples for which the serovar of the environmental and calf LN Salmonella isolates matched, the isolates were submitted for whole genome sequencing to determine whether environmental exposure resulted in LN infection. Cohort-level Salmonella mesenteric LN prevalence ranged from 0% (0 of 35 samples) to 80% (28 of 35 samples), and pooled prefemoral LNs were positive for Salmonella in 3 of the 10 cohorts. Salmonella prevalence in samples from barns, livestock trailers, and harvest facility holding pens was 22% (13 of 60 samples), 74% (59 of 80 samples), and 93% (74 of 80 samples), respectively. Some environmental and LN isolates were multidrug resistant. Four instances of Salmonella transmission from trailers and/or holding pens to calf LNs were supported by sequence data. Salmonella serovars Agona, Give, and Muenster were identified in transmission events. One instance of transmission from the livestock trailer, two instances from holding pens, and one instance from either trailer or holding pens were observed. Further research is needed to evaluate the extent of environmental Salmonella transmission in cattle and to determine whether targeted interventions in trailers or holding pens could reduce novel Salmonella LN infection in veal calves before harvest.
doi_str_mv 10.4315/JFP-21-410
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The aim of this study was to leverage the vertical integration of special-fed veal production to identify preharvest environmental exposures, specifically in livestock trailers and harvest facility holding pens where calves spend 30 min to 4 h, that result in Salmonella LN infection. Ten cohorts of 80 to 82 veal calves were followed through the harvest process, and environmental samples were collected in barns, trailers, and holding pens. Mesenteric LNs from 35 calves were collected at harvest, and 25 prefemoral LNs per cohort were pooled. Within the same cohort, for 12 samples for which the serovar of the environmental and calf LN Salmonella isolates matched, the isolates were submitted for whole genome sequencing to determine whether environmental exposure resulted in LN infection. Cohort-level Salmonella mesenteric LN prevalence ranged from 0% (0 of 35 samples) to 80% (28 of 35 samples), and pooled prefemoral LNs were positive for Salmonella in 3 of the 10 cohorts. Salmonella prevalence in samples from barns, livestock trailers, and harvest facility holding pens was 22% (13 of 60 samples), 74% (59 of 80 samples), and 93% (74 of 80 samples), respectively. Some environmental and LN isolates were multidrug resistant. Four instances of Salmonella transmission from trailers and/or holding pens to calf LNs were supported by sequence data. Salmonella serovars Agona, Give, and Muenster were identified in transmission events. One instance of transmission from the livestock trailer, two instances from holding pens, and one instance from either trailer or holding pens were observed. 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subjects Age
Animals
Antimicrobial agents
Barns
Beef
Beef cattle
Calves
Cattle
Cattle Diseases - epidemiology
Contaminants
Contamination
Dairy industry
Drug resistance
Epidemics
Farms
Food contamination & poisoning
Food safety
Gene sequencing
Genomes
Humans
Illnesses
Infections
Intervention
Livestock
Lymph Nodes
Lymphatic system
Milk
Multidrug resistance
Pens
Prevalence
Public health
Red Meat
Salmonella
Trailers
Veal
Whole genome sequencing
title Prevalence and Sources of Salmonella Lymph Node Infection in Special-Fed Veal Calves
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