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Hog Cholera Classical Swine Fever

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Title: Hog Cholera Classical Swine Fever


1
Hog Cholera(Classical Swine Fever)
  • Sandra Axiak
  • and
  • Carolin Winter

2
Definition of hog cholera
  • highly contagious viral disease of swine
  • can cause acute, chronic, or congenital disease
  • considered a foreign animal disease

3
Foreign animal disease (FAD)
  • Definition
  • a transmissible disease of livestock or poultry
  • absent from the US and its territories
  • has the potential for significant health or
    economic losses
  • Examples of important FADs
  • foot and mouth disease
  • highly pathogenic avian influenza
  • hog cholera

4
Foreign animal disease
  • Control of FADs usually means eradication.
  • The U.S. spent 79 million during the final
    stages of hog cholera eradication (1971-1977)
  • Hog cholera was officially eradicated from the
    U.S. in 1978

5
Etiology
  • Family Flaviviridae
  • Genus Pestivirus
  • Only one serotype of the virus
  • Closely related to BVDV

6
Epidemiology of HCV
  • Hosts
  • pigs and wild boar
  • Incubation period
  • usually 3-4 days, but can range from 2-14 days
  • Distribution
  • occurs in much of Asia, Central and South
    America, and parts of Europe and Africa
  • disease has been eradicated from about 16
    countries, including Australia, Canada, and the
    United States (1978 - after a 16 year long effort)

7
Epidemiology of HCV
  • Transmission
  • Blood, tissues, semen, secretions, and excretions
    of infected animals contain HCV
  • transmission usually occurs via oral route
  • can also occur via the conjunctiva, mucous
    membranes, skin abrasions, insemination, common
    needles, and contaminated instruments

8
Epidemiolgy of HCV
  • Transmission
  • Feeding raw or insufficiently cooked waste food
    containing infected pork scraps can be a potent
    source of HCV
  • Mechanical vectors can spread HCV
  • farm visitors - on their person or their clothes
  • vehicles
  • insects and birds

9
Epidemiology of HCV
  • Transmission
  • Transplacental infection with a lowly virulent
    strain of HCV can result in persistently infected
    piglets
  • These piglets will persistently shed the virus
    for months before succumbing to the disease

10
Forms of the disease
  • Acute form
  • Chronic form
  • Congenital form

11
Clinical signs of acute infection
  • Fever of 106 to 108 degrees Fahrenheit
  • may see huddling of pigs in warmest area of pen
  • Lethargy and anorexia
  • Intermittent vomiting of yellow fluid containing
    bile
  • Transient constipation followed by diarrhea
  • Conjunctivitis with encrustation around the eye
  • Coughing and dyspnea

12
Clinical signs of acute infection
  • Terminal stages of infections
  • Hemorrhagic lesions of the skin, especially on
    the abdomen and inner aspects of the thighs
  • Cyanosis of the skin, especially the extremities
  • ears, limbs, tail, snout
  • Ataxia and paresis due to posterior weakness
  • Convulsions may occur shortly before death
  • Death usually occurs within 5 to 15 days of onset
  • Mortality can approach 100 in young pigs

13
Cyanosis of the skin (extremities)
14
Gross lesions of acute infection
  • Swollen, edematous, and hemorrhagic lymph nodes
  • esp. submandibular and pharyngeal lymph nodes
  • Splenic infarcts
  • All serous and mucosal surfaces may have
    petechial or ecchymotic hemorrhages
  • Peritonitis, pleuritis, and pericarditis
  • straw-colored fluid

15
Gross lesions of acute infection
  • Petechial and ecchymotic hemorrhages on
  • skin
  • surface of the kidneys
  • surface of the small and large intestine
  • larynx
  • heart
  • epiglottis
  • fascia lata of the back muscles

16
Petechial hemorrhages - skin
17
Petechial hemorrhages - kidney surface
18
Petechial hemorrhages - abdominal viscera
19
Petechial hemorrhages - larynx
20
Other lesions of acute infection
  • Leukopenia and thrombocytopenia
  • Encephalomyelitis with microgliosis and
    perivascular cuffing is found in brains from
    about 75 of pigs acutely infected with HCV

21
Clinical signs of chronic infection
  • Prolonged and intermittent periods of
  • anorexia
  • fever
  • dullness
  • alternating diarrhea and constipation for up to a
    month
  • alopecia

22
Clinical signs of chronic infection
  • May have a disproportionately large head relative
    to their small trunk
  • Apparent recovery with eventual relapse
  • All chronically infected pigs will die due to
    complications arising from HCV infection

23
Gross lesions of chronic infection
  • Lesions can be similar to those found in the
    acute form of infection, but are generally less
    severe.
  • Button ulcers in the cecum and large intestine
    due to secondary bacterial infection are common
  • Generalized depletion of lymphoid tissue
  • Hemorrhagic lesions may not be present in
    chronically infected pigs

24
Button ulcers
25
Clinical signs of congenital infections
  • Highly virulent strain
  • abortion
  • birth of diseased pigs that die shortly after
    birth
  • Less virulent strain
  • mummification
  • stillbirth
  • birth of weak, shaker pigs (congenital tremor)

26
Clinical signs of congenital infections
  • If infected with a lowly virulent strain during
    fetuss 1st trimester of life, piglets may
  • not produce neutralizing antibody to the virus
  • experience life-long viremia and persistently
    shed the virus
  • have few clinical signs for the first few months
    of life, then develop anorexia, depression,
    diarrhea conjunctivitis, dermatitis, runting, and
    ataxia
  • ultimately end up recumbent and die

27
Gross lesions of congenital infections
  • Cerebellar hypoplasia
  • Microencephaly
  • Pulmonary hypoplasia
  • Central dysmyelinogenesis
  • Thymus atrophy
  • Deformities of the head and limbs
  • Petechial hemorrhages of the skin and internal
    organs towards the end of the disease process

28
Differential diagnosis
  • African Swine Fever
  • distinguished from hog cholera only via
    laboratory examination
  • Erysipelas
  • Salmonellosis
  • Colisepticemia
  • Thrombocytopenic purpura
  • Acute pasteurellosis
  • Infection with BVDV

29
Diagnosis of hog cholera
  • Specimens that should be collected and sent to
    the lab for virus isolation and antigen detection
    include
  • tonsils (best)
  • submandibular and mesenteric lymph nodes
  • spleen, kidney, brain, and distal ileum
  • For living cases, collect
  • tonsil biopsies and blood in EDTA
  • DO NOT freeze samples - interferes with some of
    the tests

30
Laboratory diagnosis
  • Direct IFA on cryostat sections of organs or
    impression smears of biopsy material
  • ELISA - blood antibody test
  • RT-PCR
  • Virus isolation in cell culture
  • detect virus by immunoperoxidase or
    immunofluorescence using labeled hog cholera
    antibody

31
Typical response to an outbreak
  • Slaughter all the pigs on affected farms
  • Dispose of carcasses, bedding, manure, etc.
  • Disinfect the premises thoroughly
  • Designate a zone of infection and control the
    movement of pigs within that zone while
    maintaining careful surveillance of that zone and
    the surrounding area
  • Detailed epidemiological investigation to
    determine the source of the infection and its
    possible spread

32
Why prevent hog cholera?
  • high death rates and severe illness cause
    significant production losses
  • loss of productivity leads to an increase in the
    cost of food products obtained from swine
  • lose economically important export markets until
    eradication is again achieved
  • 1997 total value of exported U.S. pork products
    exceeded 1 billion
  • Re-eradication can be very costly
  • 1997 outbreak in the Netherlands cost 2 billion

33
Prevention and control
  • Affected pigs must be culled and the carcasses
    must be buried or burned
  • Vaccination is used to reduce the number of
    outbreaks in countries where hog cholera is
    enzootic
  • Vaccination is generally prohibited in countries
    which are free of disease or where eradication is
    in progress and nearing success

34
Vaccination
  • Modified live vaccines
  • Lapinized Chinese strain
  • Japanese guinea pigs cell culture-adapted strain
  • French Thiverval strain
  • All three are innocuous for pregnant sows and
    piglets over 2 weeks of age
  • All three are considered equally effective

35
Prevention and control
  • Other prophylactic measures include
  • quarantining incoming pigs before introducing
    them to the herd
  • U.S. quaratines swine imported from affected
    countries for 90 days at a facility in Key West,
    FL
  • keeping a good pig identification and recording
    system
  • strict adherence to waste food cooking laws
  • structured serological surveillance of breeding
    sows and boars to detect subclinical infections
  • maintaining a strict import policy for live pigs,
    as well as fresh and cured pork

36
Inactivating the virus
  • Temperature
  • partially resistant to temperatures up to 130
    degrees Fahrenheit
  • pH
  • inactivated by a pH less than 3 or greater than
    11
  • Chemicals
  • Susceptible to ether and chloroform

37
Inactivating the virus
  • Disinfectants
  • 2 NaOH
  • 1 formalin
  • sodium carbonate

38
Survival of the virus
  • HCV can survive some forms of meat processing
  • curing
  • smoking
  • It survives well in cold temperatures
  • survives for months in refrigerated meat
  • survives for years in frozen meat

39
Recent outbreaks
  • Haiti and the Dominican Republic eradicated hog
    cholera in the early 1980s
  • Both, however, experienced outbreaks of the
    disease in 1997, causing pork producers to
    experience substantial economic losses
  • Belgium and the Netherlands also experienced
    outbreaks of hog cholera in 1997

40
Recent outbreaks
  • Hog cholera was eradicated from Great Britain in
    1966
  • Since then there have been a few sporadic cases
    in 1971 and 1986
  • The disease returned to Great Britain in 2000,
    when a total of 16 cases were confirmed in East
    Anglia
  • A total of 74,793 pigs, including those on
    in-contact farms, were slaughtered

41
Hog cholera in Luxembourg

42
Hog cholera in Luxembourg
  • October 2001
  • wild boar was found dead in Berbourg Forest in
    eastern Luxembourg
  • boar tested positive for hog cholera
  • November 2001
  • four additional wild boars were found dead in the
    Berbourg area
  • all four tested positive for hog cholera

43
Hog cholera in Luxembourg
  • January 2002
  • an additional wild boar, which was found dead in
    Herborn (near Berbourg), tested positive for hog
    cholera
  • February 2002
  • 2 cases of hog cholera were diagnosed on a pig
    farm near Berbourg (breeding pigs)
  • All 147 pigs on the farm were destroyed
  • All pigs (178) within 1 km of the affected farm
    were also destroyed to prevent possible spread of
    the disease

44
Hog cholera in Luxembourg
  • March 2002
  • Piglets that originated from the affected farm
    were traced to two farms, one in northern
    Luxembourg, one in southern Luxembourg
  • These piglets, all other pigs on the two farms,
    and all pigs within 1 km of these two farms were
    destroyed for a total of 6,259 pigs
  • Shows that drastic action is being to prevent a
    full-blown outbreak of hog cholera in Luxembourg
    in order to prevent the immense economic and
    production losses that could result form such an
    outbreak

45
Sources
  • The Gray Book - Classical Swine Fever
  • http//www.oie.int/eng/en_index.htm
  • http//aphis.usda.gov/oa/pubs/fscsf.html
  • http//www.oie.int.eng/maladies/fiches/A_A130.htm
  • http//www.defra.gov.uk/animalh/diseases/notifiabl
    e/disease/classicalsf.htm
  • http//www.defra.gov.uk/animalh/diseases/notifiabl
    e/statistics/classicalsf.htm

46
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