Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2465488 The Veterinary Journal 2008 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Neurological disease represents a sporadic but serious manifestation of bovine salmonellosis that is thought to be related to systemic infection. Salmonella enterica serovar Dublin (S. Dublin) is the serovar most associated with systemic infection in cattle, although reports of neurological disease associated with S. Dublin or any other serovar are rare and usually anecdotal. This study reports the involvement of three strains of S. enterica, serovars Saintpaul, Montevideo, and Enteritidis, in Salmonella encephalopathies. Encephalopathies were reproduced in calves using a norepinephrine-based stress model. Neurological signs were not observed in calves infected with control strains of S. enterica, including S. Dublin, or in calves infected with clinical strains in the absence of norepinephrine. Therefore, norepinephrine may play a role in Salmonella encephalopathies.

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