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Foodborne Pathogens and Disease
Strain Persistence and Fluctuation of Multiple-Antibiotic Resistant Campylobacter coli Colonizing Turkeys over Successive Production Cycles
To cite this article:
Bong Choon Lee, Nancy Reimers, H. John Barnes, Carol D'Lima, Donna Carver, Sophia Kathariou.
Foodborne Pathogens and Disease.
Spring 2005,
2(1): 103-110.
doi:10.1089/fpd.2005.2.103.
Bong Choon Lee Department of Food Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina. Nancy Reimers Poultry Health Division, College of Veterinary Medicine, Raleigh, North Carolina. H. John Barnes Poultry Health Division, College of Veterinary Medicine, Raleigh, North Carolina. Carol D'Lima Department of Food Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina. Donna Carver Department of Poultry Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina. Dr. Sophia Kathariou Department of Food Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina. The dynamics of colonization of turkeys by thermophilic campylobacters that are resistant to multiple antibiotics is poorly understood. In this study, we monitored cecal colonization of turkeys by Campylobacter over three successive production cycles at the same farm. Campylobacter isolated from the ceca was predominantly C. coli in all three flocks. Isolates with two distinct fla types that represented a single clonal group based on pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and that were resistant to multiple antibiotics (tetracycline, streptomycin, ampicillin, erythromycin, kanamycin, nalidixic acid, and ciprofloxacin) predominated throughout the three production cycles. The relative prevalence of each fla type, however, varied significantly from one flock to the next. The repeated isolation of these multiresistant C. coli from successive flocks likely reflected persistence of the organisms in currently unknown reservoirs in the production environment or, alternatively, repeated introduction events followed by establishment of these bacteria in each successive flock. 
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