Comparative efficacy of oral and cloacal administration of Lactobacillus probiotics and postbiotics against Campylobacter jejuni colonization in broiler chickens
Shreeya Sharma, Hosni Hassan, Khaled Abdelaziz

TL;DR
This study compares oral and cloacal administration of Lactobacillus probiotics and postbiotics to reduce Campylobacter in chickens, finding that probiotics lower colonization and alter gut microbiome diversity.
Contribution
The study introduces a comparative evaluation of administration routes and forms of Lactobacillus for controlling Campylobacter in poultry.
Findings
Oral and cloacal probiotic administration reduced Campylobacter colonization by 0.34 and 0.78 log₁₀, respectively.
Probiotic-treated groups showed higher gut microbial diversity and lower opportunistic bacteria compared to controls.
Intracloacal postbiotics enriched Ruminococcus, while oral combined treatments increased unclassified Firmicutes.
Abstract
Campylobacter jejuni remains a major cause of foodborne illness worldwide, with poultry serving as the primary reservoir. In the absence of commercial vaccines or effective feed additives, probiotics and their byproducts (postbiotics) represent a promising and sustainable approach to reducing Campylobacter colonization in poultry. This study compared the efficacy of oral and cloacal administration of probiotic lactobacilli and their postbiotics in reducing Campylobacter colonization and modulating the cecal microbiome in broiler chickens. Day-old chicks were assigned to seven treatment groups that received either probiotics (live cells of four poultry-derived Lactobacillus strains: L. reuteri P43, L. acidophilus P42, L. animalis P38, and L. crispatus C25) or postbiotics (Lactobacillus supernatants) or their combination (whole cultures) orally or intracloacally, with a non-treated group…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSalmonella and Campylobacter epidemiology · Probiotics and Fermented Foods · Animal Nutrition and Physiology
