A cutaneous mycosis caused by Candida albicans that involved the combs and less frequently the wattles, facial skin, ear lobes, and neck of male broiler breeders is described. Roosters were 35 wk old and housed with hens in two conventional broiler breeder houses on a farm in western North Carolina. Morbidity was approximately 10% in one house and less than 2% in the other house. Mortality and flock fertility were not affected. Three birds from the most affected house were examined. All birds had white adherent material on their combs that presented as crusty patches or lighter diffuse areas. Often, lesions were roughly circular or had a defined margin. Small black scabs were present in a few lesions. Similar but less extensive lesions were located on the wattles, facial skin, ear lobes, and rictus. In one bird, lesions extended down the neck, and they were accompanied by hyperemia and feather loss. Hyperkeratosis with little to no inflammation and intralesional fungi occurring as yeast and pseudohyphae were seen microscopically. High numbers of C. albicans were isolated and identified from the lesions.
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1 June 2007
Comb Candidiasis Affecting Roosters in a Broiler Breeder Flock
Claudia Osorio,
Oscar Fletcher,
Michael J. Dykstra,
Karen Post,
H. John Barnes
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Avian Diseases
Vol. 51 • No. 2
June 2007
Vol. 51 • No. 2
June 2007
broiler breeder male
Candida albicans
candidiasis
chicken
mycosis