Investigation of Melioidosis Outbreak in Pig Farms in Southern Thailand.
Wiyada KwanhianTreenate JiranantasakAleeza T KesslerBryn E TolchinskySarah ParkerJirarat SongsriSuebtrakool WisessombatKawinsaya PukanhaVincentius A TestamentiPacharapong KhrongseeSomporn SretrirutchaiJedsada KaewrakmukJitbanjong TangpongApichai TuanyokPublished in: Veterinary sciences (2020)
Melioidosis, caused by the Gram-negative bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei, is a potentially life-threatening infection that can affect humans and a wide variety of animals in the tropics. In December 2017, a swine melioidosis case was discovered during a meat inspection at a privately-owned slaughterhouse in Nakhon Si Thammarat Province in southern Thailand. The infection, which continued for several months, caused a dispute about where the disease began. An environmental investigation into two farms-both involved in raising the first infected pig-ensued. Through genetic analysis, the investigation revealed that a contaminated water supply at one farm was the probable source of infection. The three local sequence types identified in the investigation were types 51, 298 and 392.