Pseudorabies Flashcards

1
Q

What are the characteristics of Pseudorabies Virus (PRV)?

A
  • Herpesviridae
  • Herpein = to creep
  • dsDNA enveloped virus
    • 140kb
  • Known for ability to establish lifelong infections, immune evasion and latency
  • Sensitive to disinfectants, relatively unstable outside hose
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2
Q

What is the history of Pseudorabies?

A
  • 1813 - earlies reports in US - cattle “Mad-itch”
  • 1902 - PRV isolated as etiologic agent
  • 1960s - PRV oubreaks increased significantly in US
  • 1983 - 18.8% of US herd seropositive
  • 2004 - US PRV-free
    • eradicated in commercial swine, endemic in feral swine
  • 2011 - PRV variant emerged in China
    • more virulent
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3
Q

What animals are susceptible to pseudorabies virus?

A
  • Natural host - swine (only reservoir host)
  • Dead end hosts - diverse group of vertebrates
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4
Q

How does PRV affect dead end hosts?

A
  • High mortality due to fatal encephalitis, neurologic signs
    • death typically within 2-3 days
  • Carnivores - infected after consuming infected carcass
  • Humans and high order primates - rare and sporadic cases
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5
Q

How is PRV transmitted?

A
  • Shedding:
    • Oronasal and vaginal secretions
    • semen, urine, feces
    • milk/colostrum
  • Transmission:
    • Direct contact
    • aerosol
    • AI
    • fomites
    • transplacental
    • ingestion of infected tissue/milk
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6
Q

What is the pathogenesis of PRV?

A
  • Primary site of viral replication is nasal, pharyngeal, or tonsillar epithelium
  • Virus spreads via lymphatics to regional lymph nodes then becomes systemic
  • Virus spreads via nervous tissue to the brain, where replication continues
  • incubation period: 2-6 days
  • Viral shedding for >2weeks
  • Latency after acute infection
    • virus harbored in the trigeminal ganglia
  • Reactivation and shedding resumes
    • Stress, illness, transport, poor husbandry, farrowing, crowding
  • Disease severity depends on age immune status, route of infection and virulence of isolate
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7
Q

How does the clinical disease of PRV present in nursing piglets?

A
  • Primary neurologic disease
  • Mortality as high as 100% in < 2week old pigs
  • Clinical Signs:
    • Fever, tremors hypersalivation, incoordination, seizures, hind limb paralysis, ataxia, recumbency, nystagmus, paddling, death
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8
Q

How does the clinical disease of PRV present in weaned piglets?

A
  • Primary respiratory disease, occasionally CNS signs
  • Mortality 5-10%
  • Clinical Signs:
    • fever, listlessness, decreased appetite, sneezing, nasal discharge, harsh cough, conjunctivitis, dyspnea, loss of condition
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9
Q

How does the clinical disease of PRV present in adult pigs?

A
  • Grower/Adult
    • Primary respiratory disease
    • usually mild or subclinical
    • mortality 1-2%
  • Gilts/Sows (all parities)
    • Reproductive failure - 20% on infected farms
    • Resorption, abortion, stillbirths, mummified fetuses, weak piglets
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10
Q

What are the Gross lesions associated with PRV

A
  • Serous or fibrinonecrotic rhinitis
  • Keratoconjunctivitis
  • Pulmonary edema, congestion, consolidation, hemorrhage
  • Congested and hemorrhagic lymph nodes
  • Necrotic foci in liver, tonsils, spleen, lymph nodes, adrenals
    • aborted fetuses
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11
Q

What are the histopathologic lesions associated with PRV?

A
  • Nonsuppurative meningoencephalitis (characteristic)
  • Trigeminal ganglioneuritis, neuronal necrosis
  • Necrotic tonsilitis, bronchitis, bronchiolitis, alveolitis
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12
Q

What are the NON-porcine Clinical sings of PRV?

A
  • Sadden death
  • Intense local pruritus
  • self mutilation
  • CNS signs
  • circling
  • paralysis
  • fever respiratory distress
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13
Q

How is PRV diagnosed?

A
  • Viral detection
    • VI, FA, PCR, IHC
    • Brain, spleen, lung, tonsil
    • Nasal swabs (acute infections)
  • Serology
    • ELISA, SN, latex agglutination
    • ONLY SWINE
    • detect latent infections
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14
Q

How is PRV controlled?

A
  • Reported to state/federal authorities
  • PRV inactivated by sunlight, drying, high temps, several disinfectants
  • Biosecurity:
    • protect domestic pigs from contact with feral or wild suids
  • MLV Vaccine
    • generally prohibited in PRV-free countries
    • Decreases clinical signs, reduces viral shedding, improves survival
    • Does NOT provide sterile immunity or prevent latent infections
    • DIVA (Differentiating Infected from Vaccinated Animals)
      • Gene deletions in vaccine allow Ab differentiation
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15
Q

What are the Vesicular Disease Viruses?

A
  • Foot and mouth disease virus (FMDV)
  • Seneca Virus A (SVA)
  • Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV)
  • Swine vesicular disease virus (SVDV)
  • Vesicular exanthema of swine virus (VESV)
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16
Q

What is Foot and Mouth Disease Virus?

A
  • Picornaviridae, genus Aphthovirus
  • ssRNA+, nonenveloped (environmentally resistant)
  • Highly contagious disease of cloven-hooved livestock and wildlife
  • Outbreaks can severely disrupt livestock production and require significant resources to control
  • 7 major serotypes:
    • A, O, C, Asia 1, SAT 1, 2, 3
      • O most common
    • Immunity not cross-protective
17
Q

How is FMDV transmitted?

A
  • Direct or indirect contact with infectious secretions, excretions, and tissues
  • Mechanical vectors
  • Aerosolized virus
18
Q

What are the disease characteristics of FMDV

A
  • Fever and vesicles in the oral cavity and around the mouth and feet
  • Morbidity ~100% rare fatalities
19
Q

What are the Clinical signs of FMDV

A
  • lameness and blanching around the coronary band
  • high fever
  • lethargy
  • huddling
  • reduced appetite
  • vesicles develop on the coronary band, heel of foot including accessory digits, snout, mandible, and tongue
20
Q

What is the pathogenesis of FMDV?

A
  • Primary site of infection is the nasopharyngeal epithelium
  • Virus is then distributed throughout the body and replicates in the epithelium of the mouth, muzzle, teats, feet, and areas of damaged skin
  • Vesicles develop and rupture within48 hours
21
Q

How is FMDV diagnosed?

A
  • Tissue choice for sampling: vesicular epithelium or fluid
    • oropharyngeal fluid or swab if vesicles not present
  • Serology:
    • ELISA
22
Q

What are the possible differential diagnosis for suspected FMDV?

A
  • SVA, VSV, SVDV, VESV
  • Clinical disease is identical
  • Laboratory confirmation is essential (FAD investigation required)
  • Contact authorities and DO NOT REMOVE any samples from the premise
23
Q

How is FMDV contolled?

A
  • Reduce risks of viral introduction
    • slaughter infected and susceptible animals during outbreaks
    • movement restrictions
    • vaccines used in endemic countries
24
Q

What is Senecavirus A (SVA)?

A
  • AKA: Seneca Valley Virus (SVV)
  • Picornaviridae, genus Senecavirus (only member)
    • ssRNA+ non-enveloped
  • discovered in 2002
  • Swine thought to be natural host
  • SVA infrequently associated with outbreaks of idiopathic vesicular disease in pigs
  • July 2015: significant emergence of SVA
  • 2016: confirmation that SVA isolates cause vesicular disease in pigs
  • Significant concern due to the inability to distinguish lesions for FMDV!
  • A widespread emerging Swine Production Disease
25
Q

What is Vesicular Stomatitis Virus (VSV)?

A
  • Rhabdoviridae, genus Vesiculovirus
    • ssRNA- enveloped
  • Clinical disease in cattle, horses, and pigs
    • can cause self-limiting influenza-like disease in humans
    • Morbidity in herd 10-20%
  • 2 distinct serotypes: New Jersey and Indiana
  • Disease seen sporadically in US (primarily horses and cattle)
  • Transmission through direct contact with infected animals or by blood-feeding insects
26
Q

What is Swine vesicular disease virus (SVDV)?

A
  • Picornaviridae, genus enterovirus
    • +ssRNA non-enveloped
  • Pigs only natural host
  • Reported in Europe and Asia
    • economically important due to cost of eradication and embargoes on export of pigs/pork
  • Transmission by direct or indirect contact or by feeding infected pork products