45. Rabbit haemorrhagic disease, European brown hare syndrome. Flashcards

1
Q

History, Occurrence?

A

Rabbit haemorrhagic disease (& European brown hare syndrome) - Notifiable

x History, occurrence

  • 1984, China: emergence in rabbits imported from Germany
  • Spread to Korea (1984)
  • Emergence in Italy (1986) ʹ quick spread w/in Europe
  • Used as a biological weapon against rabbits ʹ Australia
  • RHDV-2 emergence in France (2010) ʹ spread w/in Europe & Australia
  • World-wide present (Asia, Europe, Americas, N. Africa, Australia)
  • Australia: biological control of rural rabbits
  • 1991: lab tests ofsusceptibility
  • 1995: Wardang Island virus escaped
  • 1996: permitted for rabbit control (pest management)
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2
Q

Causative agent of Rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus 1?

A

Causative agent

  • Rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus 1 (RHDV-1, 1a)
  • ONLY rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) is susceptible
  • Resistant in the environment: for months in chilled/frozen, carcasses (fomite, fly/insect ʹ all 3
  • viruses!)
  • Cannot be propagated in cell cultures - have to test the vaccine in live animals
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3
Q

RHV2 causative agent?

A

Rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus 2 (RHDV-2)

  • Rabbit & hare (Lepus europaeus) are susceptible
  • Longer incubation period, lower mortality (?)
  • Younger rabbits are also susceptible (?)
  • Serologically different from RHDV-1
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4
Q

European brown hare syndrome causative agent?

A

European brown hare syndrome virus (EBHSV)

  • ONLY hare susceptible, known EU since 1980s
  • Serologically distinct from RHDV
  • The disease in hares is very similar to RHD
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5
Q

Epizootiology, pathogenesis?

A

Epizootiology, pathogenesis

  • Rabbits susceptible over 1 (2) months of age
  • Shedding via faeces, excretes ʹ very contagious
  • Direct & indirect transmission (fomites, people etc.) ʹ flies can spread the virus ʹ few viral particles
  • necessary for conjunctive route is enough
  • PO, air-borne infections: viremia, propagation in liver, vasculitis
  • Liver dystrophy, thrombo-embolia in airways & visceral organs ʹ haemorrhages
  • Mortality up to 100%
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6
Q

Clinical signs?

A

Clinical signs from 6-8 weeks

  • Incubation 1-4 days
  • Peracute: no specific clinical signs, depression & fever, death w/in few hours
  • Acute: depression, fever, foamy &/or bloody nasal discharge, heavy breathing (edema),
  • incoordination, shaking, terminal opisthotonus, die in 12-36 hours
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7
Q

Pathology, Histopathology?

A

Pathology, histopathology

  • Haemorrhage: lung, resp tract, everywhere
  • Lungs: oedema, emphysema
  • Kidney: haemorrhages, infarcts, congested medulla
  • Catarrhal enteritis
  • Liver: swollen, necrotic cells; necrosis starting from portal area
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8
Q

Diagnosis?

A

Diagnosis

  • Clinical signs, high mortality, PM lesions
  • Only VESI viruses can be cultured
  • Histopathology ʹ liver dystrophy, necrosis
  • Virus detection: RT-PCR, HA; serology: HAI, ELISA
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9
Q

Control?

A

Control

  • No treatment!
  • Sanitary prophylaxis: movement restrictions, humane slaughter & disposal of sick & in-contact
  • animals, healthy animals in the same farm may be immunised
  • Medical prophylaxis: vaccinations
  • Inactivated vaccine (From rabbit liver), recently RHDV-2 vaccine was launched
  • Recombinant, myxomatosis virus vectored live vaccine
  • Vaccination at 4-5 weeks of age, yearly repetitions
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