Article
Coinfection Flock health

Mixed Infections in Poultry – A Practical Diagnostic Approach for Field

Mixed infections are a frequent field challenge in poultry practice, especially under Indian conditions where birds are exposed to multiple pathogens and environmental stressors. Instead of a single causative agent, many outbreaks involve two or more pathogens acting together, leading to atypical clinical presentations¹. 

Why Diagnosis Is Challenging 

Mixed infections rarely follow classical disease patterns. Birds often present with overlapping respiratory, enteric, and systemic signs, making single-agent diagnosis unreliable¹. 

Immunosuppressive conditions such as Infectious Bursal Disease reduce immune competence and may mask expected clinical responses². 

Coinfections involving Newcastle Disease and infectious bronchitis virus are known to produce more severe and variable disease outcomes, further complicating diagnosis³. 

Field Indicators of Mixed Infections 

In practical settings, certain patterns should raise suspicion of coinfections. These include poor response to routine therapy, higher mortality than expected, and uneven flock performance¹. 

Persistent or recurring disease despite treatment is another important indicator that multiple pathogens may be involved.  

Diagnostic Approach in the Field 

A syndromic approach is more effective than focusing on a single pathogen. Flock history, including vaccination status, recent stressors, and seasonality, provides important diagnostic clues¹. 

Necropsy findings showing multi-organ involvement should prompt consideration of mixed infections. 

Where feasible, laboratory support should aim at simultaneous pathogen detection. Molecular tools such as multiplex PCR enable identification of multiple agents in a single sample and improve diagnostic accuracy⁴. 

Diagnostic Pitfalls 

Detection of one pathogen should not exclude the presence of others. Over-reliance on clinical signs without laboratory confirmation can lead to incomplete diagnosis and ineffective management. 

Conclusion 

Mixed infections should be suspected in most field outbreaks with atypical presentation or poor treatment response. A multi-pathogen diagnostic strategy combining clinical, post-mortem, and laboratory inputs can significantly improve outcomes in poultry practice. 

References  

  1. Liu H, Pan S, Wang C, Yang W, Wei X, He Y, Xu T, Shi K, Si H. Review of respiratory syndromes in poultry: pathogens, prevention, and control measures. Veterinary research. 2025 May 17;56(1):101. https://veterinaryresearch.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13567-025-01506-y 
  1. Jaton J, Gómez E, Lucero MS, Gravisaco MJ, Pinto S, Vagnozzi A, Craig MI, Di Giacomo S, Berinstein A, Zoth SC. Study of coinfection with local strains of infectious bursal disease virus and infectious bronchitis virus in specific pathogen-free chickens. Poultry Science. 2023 Dec 1;102(12):103129. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S003257912300648X 
  1. Samy A, Naguib MM. Avian respiratory coinfection and impact on avian influenza pathogenicity in domestic poultry: field and experimental findings. Veterinary sciences. 2018 Feb 24;5(1):23. https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci5010023  
  1. Piri-Gharaghie T, Ghajari G, Lahijani NT, Pecho RD, Hussam F, Castillo-Acobo RY, Aghassizadeh-Sherbaf M. Simultaneous and rapid detection of avian respiratory diseases of small poultry using multiplex reverse transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction assay. Poultry Science. 2023 Aug 1;102(8):102852. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0032579123003711