36. African swine fever. Flashcards

1
Q

Definition?

A

NOTIFIABLE DISEASE!

Definition:

  • Usually acute viral disease of domestic swine and wild boar with fever,
  • general symptoms,
  • extensive haemorrhages and high mortality
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2
Q

Occurrence and cause?

A

Occurrence:

  • Southern part of Africa (1921),
  • Kenya, Montgomery, Europe Portugal (1957), again in 1959 ʹ
  • stayed in soft ticks, Spain (ticks: until 1990)
  • America (1970s), Sardinia endemic, Hungary (2018)
  • Ticks as biological vectors (virus can replicate in soft ticks and transmit)
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3
Q

Ethiology?

A

Etiology:

  • Asfarviridae family, Asfivirus genus, African swine fever virus
  • 200 nm, enveloped (but still very resistant), icosahedral, linear dsDNA, 150 kbp, 1 serotype,
  • virulence variants (genetically different)
  • Arbovirus: present in Ornithodorus species, spread by tick and replicate in tick
  • Also direct contact route (via saliva)
  • There is no virus neutralization (once infected, become persistant infection, lifelong shedding,
  • survival varies), hemabsorption (in hemagglutination test will always be negative - need to cell
  • culture: RBC will be absorbed by infected cells)
  • Susceptibility: swine, wild boar, African pig species
  • Highly resistant (survive in environment for 100-200 days, years long in freezer - frozen meat, 60C
  • for 20 min)
  • Disinfection with 2% NaOH, 0.3% formalin, hypochlorite 30 min, iodine
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4
Q

Epidemiology?

A

Epidemiology:

  • Endemic areas: wartgot, bush pig, giant forest hog, recovered pigs (survived pigs shedding virus),
  • ticks
  • Europe, America: live pig, pork, (ticks)
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5
Q

Pathogenesis?

A

Pathogenesis:

  • infection PO, tick bites > primary replication (tonsils, LN) > viremia for months > spleen,
  • LN, bone marrow, blood vessels endothel (hemorrhages) > replication (monocyte, macrophage,
  • endothel, hepatocyte, tubular epithel, granulocyte, NOT in lymphocytes)
  • Shedding via saliva, nasal discharges, can sheds 48 hr before clinical symptoms
  • No virus neutralization (intensive antibody production, but antibodies cannot neutralize virus),
  • cytoplasma membrane of macrophages is taken (virus hide/mimic itself with macrophages,
  • immunity cannot detect)
  • Immune complexes: virus release proteins => causing immunosuppression
  • TYPE III THREE HYPERSENSITIVITY
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6
Q

High, moderate mild?

A
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7
Q

Clinical signs?

A

Clinical signs:

  • incubation is 1 week
  • 40-41C fever, transient anorexia, abortion in ALL virulence variants
  • Clinical signs are influenced by virulence of strains
  • Wild boar: milder signs, can be chronic form
  • Hemorrhages on skin (large areas) with necrotic area, nasal discharges, cyanotic edges on ear
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8
Q

Pathology?

A

Pathology:

  • Acute:
  • hyperemia,
  • petechial hemorrhages everywhere, black LN, pulmonary edema,
  • enlarged spleen (characteristic, 6X larger, black)
  • Chronic:
  • spleen, lymphoid hyperplasia,
  • fibrin-rich fluid (pericardium, thorax, abdominal
  • cavity),
  • pneumonia, skin necrcosis
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9
Q

Diagnosis and differential diagnosis?

A

Diagnosis:

  • epidemiology, clinical signs, PM lesions
  • Detection of virus: PCR (nucleic acid detection), IF, hemabsorption, virus isolation
  • Detection of antibodies: ELISA, western bot
  • Animal infection
  • Differential diagnosis:
  1. classical swine fever (clinical signs and pathology is very similar, differentiate by the 4 pigs test- vaccinated and infect (if 2 were vaccinated against classical swine fever but all died = infection was African swine fever),
  2. PDNS,
  3. acute swine paratyphoid,
  4. erysipelas (Diamond Skin),
  5. aujeszky disease
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10
Q

Prevention, control?

A

Prevention, control:

  • veterinary administration rules - its a notifiable disease
  • Epidemiological measures, tick control
  • No vaccine (no antibodies production
  • In disease free countries: stamping out of the infected herds, disinfection, leave empty for 1 month
  • before repopulation, movement restriction for 1 month after repopulation, serological control
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