Experimental production of dermatitis in sheep with Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Abstract
SUMMARY The attachment, to sheep skin, for 4 days, of control wool pads saturated with sterile culture medium which contained a bacteriostat, induced only a mild dermatitis, whereas wool pads saturated with Pseudomonas aeruginosa culture induced a subacute dermatitis characterised by scaling, microabscess formation and seropurulent exudate. Changes similar to the latter were observed in skin affected by natural fleece‐rot which developed spontaneously after 7 days of artificial wetting and in which P. aeruginosa was the predominant species of bacteria. An exacerbatory, if not causal, role for this organism is suggested in the development of the dermatitis associated with fleece‐rot and in the exudation of seropurulent material, a step essential in the development of body strike.