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Aujeszky

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Aujeszky s Disease Pseudorabies, Mad Itch Overview Organism Economic Impact Epidemiology Transmission Clinical Signs Diagnosis and Treatment Prevention and Control ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Aujeszky


1
Aujeszkys Disease
  • Pseudorabies, Mad Itch

2
Overview
  • Organism
  • Economic Impact
  • Epidemiology
  • Transmission
  • Clinical Signs
  • Diagnosis and Treatment
  • Prevention and Control
  • Actions to Take

3
The Organism
4
Aujeszkys Disease
  • Alphaherpesvirus
  • Genus Varicellovirus
  • Highly contagious
  • Natural hosts
  • Domestic and feral swine
  • Attenuated strain in feral swine
  • Somewhat persistent in environment
  • Several days in environment
  • Aerosol (under favorable conditions)

5
Importance
6
History
  • 1902
  • Aládar Aujeszky, Hungary
  • First identified in cattle and dogs
  • Determined swine werenatural hosts
  • 1931 mad itch same asAujeszkys disease
  • 1983 survey
  • 18.8 U.S. breeding swine

7
History in the U.S.
  • 1989
  • National eradication program
  • USDA APHIS, States and producers
  • Over 8000 herds identified
  • 1992
  • Over 1000 herds remain
  • 2004
  • U.S. commercial swine herds pseudorabies free

8
Economic Impact
  • Trade restrictions
  • 1988 study U.S. epizootic
  • Newborn pig mortality
  • 76.5 of total net losses (TNL)
  • Estimated 24/inventoried sow/week
  • Nursery pig mortality (12.6 TNL)
  • Sow culling and deaths (9.4 TNL)
  • Hogs and Pigs, U.S., 2008
  • 3 million head farrowed
  • 28.1 million pig crop

9
Epidemiology
10
Geographic Distribution
Disease Distribution from January to June, 2007
11
Pseudorabies Stages in U.S.
As of Feb 2008
12
Morbidity/Mortality
  • Morbidity
  • Up to 100 in domestic pig herds
  • Up to 20 abortions
  • Feral swine do notdevelop signs of disease
  • Mortality
  • Highest for younger animals
  • Up to 100 - newborn piglets
  • Up to 50 - nursery pigs
  • Decreases with age
  • 5-10 in weaner pigs
  • 1-2 in grower/finisher pigs
  • Always fatal in other animal species

13
Transmission
14
Transmission Pigs
  • Direct Contact
  • Nose-to-nose contact
  • Reproductive
  • Venereal and transplacental
  • Ingestion
  • Aerosol
  • At least 55 relative humidity
  • Persists up to 7 hours
  • Can travel up to 2 km
  • Fomites
  • Contaminated bedding and water
  • Meat products or carcasses

15
Transmission Other species
  • Contact with infected pigs
  • Ingestion of infected meat
  • Rarely lateral transmission

16
Animals andAujeszkys Disease
17
Clinical Signs Pigs
  • Incubation period 2-6 days
  • Piglets less than 1 week old
  • Fever, listlessness, anorexia
  • Neurological
  • Tremors, paddling, seizures,
  • Hind leg paralysis - dog-like position
  • High mortality within 24-36 hours
  • Slightly older piglets
  • Similar signs, lower mortality
  • Vomiting and respiratory signs

18
Clinical Signs
  • Weaned pigs
  • Respiratory illness
  • Neurological signs
  • Recover in 5-10 days
  • Adult pigs
  • Mild or inapparent infection
  • Respiratory neurological signs
  • Pregnant sows reproductive problems
  • Feral swine
  • Asymptomatic

19
Clinical Signs Other Animals
  • Cattle and sheep
  • Intense pruritus
  • Licking, rubbing, gnawing, self-mutilation
  • Neurological signs
  • Dogs and Cats
  • Similar to cattle and sheep
  • Pharyngeal paralysis and profuse salivation
  • Resembles rabies
  • Death in a few days

20
Post Mortem Lesions
  • Serous or fibrinonecrotic rhinitis
  • Visible if head split and nasal cavity opened
  • Pulmonary edema, congestion, consolidation
  • Secondary bacterial pneumonia
  • Congested and hemorrhagic lymph nodes
  • Necrosis

21
Post Mortem Lesions Pigs
  • Neurological
  • Nonsuppurative meningoencephalitis
  • Mononuclear perivascular cuffing
  • Neuronal necrosis
  • Thickened meninges
  • Respiratory
  • Necrotic tonsillitis, bronchitis, bronchiolitis,
    alveolitis
  • Reproductive (fetus)
  • Focal necrosis of liver, spleen, adrenal glands,
    lymph nodes

22
Post Mortem Other Species
  • Edema, congestion, and hemorrhage in the portions
    of the spinal cord that innervate the areas of
    pruritus
  • Cellular infiltration and neuronal degeneration

23
Differential Diagnosis
  • Pigs
  • Porcine polioencephalomyelitis
  • Classical or African swine fever
  • Hemagglutinating encephalomyelitis infection
  • Streptococcal meningoencephalitis
  • Swine influenza
  • Erysipelas
  • Nipah virus infection
  • Salt or organic poisoning
  • Species other than pigs
  • Rabies
  • Scrapie in sheep

24
Diagnosis Laboratory
  • Clinical signs suggestive
  • Virus isolation
  • Detection of viral DNA or antigens
  • Immunofluorescence, immunoperoxidase, virus
    neutralization assays, PCR
  • Serology
  • Virus neutralization, latex agglutination, ELISAs

25
Aujeszkys Diseasein Humans
  • Disease has not been reported in humans

26
Prevention and Control
27
Recommended Actions
  • Notification of Authorities
  • Federal
  • Area Veterinarian in Charge (AVIC)
    www.aphis.usda.gov/animal_health/area_offices/
  • State veterinarian www.aphis.usda.gov/vs/sregs/off
    icial.htm
  • Quarantine

28
Quarantine and Disinfection
  • Isolate and test
  • New breeding animals
  • Biosecurity measures
  • Prevent entry
  • By fomites, people,roaming animals
  • Double fencing
  • Disinfection
  • Phenols and quarternary ammonium compounds,
    sunlight, drying, high temps

29
Quarantine and Disinfection
  • Depopulation and repopulation
  • Premises cleaned, disinfected
  • Left empty for 30 days
  • Test and removal
  • Test breeding herd monthly
  • Remove positive animals
  • Difficult to detect the latently infected
  • Offspring segregation
  • Vaccinate breeding herd
  • Remove young weaned pigs

30
Vaccination
  • Protects pigs from clinical signs
  • Decrease virus shedding
  • Does not provide sterile immunity or prevent
    latent infections
  • Attenuated, inactivated, gene-deleted vaccines
  • Vaccinated pigs which become infected can be
    detected

31
Additional Resources
  • USDA-APHIS website
  • www.aphis.usda.gov
  • World Organization for Animal Health (OIE)
    website
  • www.oie.int
  • Center for Food Security and Public Health
  • www.cfsph.iastate.edu/DiseaseInfo/
  • Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
    Nations (FAO) website
  • www.fao.org

32
Acknowledgments
  • Development of this presentationwas funded by
    grants from
  • the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
    the Iowa Homeland Security and Emergency
    Management Division, and the Iowa Department of
    Agriculture and Land Stewardship to the Center
    for Food Security and Public Health at Iowa State
    University.
  • Authors Katie Spaulding, BS Anna Rovid
    Spickler, DVM, PhD Reviewers James Roth, DVM,
    PhD Glenda Dvorak, DVM, MPH, DACVPM
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