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Influenza A Virus in Swine: What You Need to Know

Influenza A Virus in Swine: What You Need to Know
Tác giả: FeedStuffs
Ngày đăng: 06/11/2017

Influenza A virus in swine (IAV-S) is one of the top three diseases affecting swine in all phases of production, so it’s no surprise that it can lead to major economic consequences for producers.1,2 The first step to getting a better handle on IAV-S is gaining a better understanding of the disease’s clinical signs, the havoc it wreaks on pigs, the routes it uses to spread, and why it’s so difficult to control.

How to identify it

IAV-S is endemic in swine populations in countries around the world, so it’s likely that it’s something most producers have dealt with before, though they may not have recognized it.3 In many cases, infections are subclinical, with animals showing few signs of illness.4

When IAV-S does rear its ugly head, it causes respiratory disease, with clinical signs typically appearing one to three days after infection.4 Those signs include fever, coughing or sneezing, runny nose, difficulty breathing, going off feed and lethargy. IAV-S commonly infects pigs in all stages of production, particularly in the early nursey phase when they’re starting on feed and early in the grow/finish phase; however, pigs of any age are susceptible.

Uncomplicated IAV-S infections have an approximately 10–14 day infection and recovery period. However, they’re the exception, not the rule, because of how IAV-S attacks the cells that line the respiratory tract of pigs, weakening their first line of defense against subsequent respiratory infections.

“Rarely do you find IAV-S by itself in swine,” says Christa Goodell, DVM, MS, Ph.D., DACVPM, technical manager at Boehringer Ingelheim. “More often, it’s going to be present with other pathogens in the porcine respiratory disease complex. So, you have multiple respiratory pathogens affecting the pig at the same time, which can make diagnosing and treating the diseases extremely difficult.”

How it spreads

The peak time for transmission occurs within the first 48 hours of an IAV-S infection. Within individual herds, it spreads most often from direct, nose-to-nose contact between pigs, through aerosols from infected animals coughing and sneezing, and via contaminated objects like sort boards, processing carts and equipment. (IAV-S is not a disease that gets in the blood, and therefore is not passed on to pigs in utero or through milk.) IAV-S can also transmit by aerosols and spread from barn to barn.

“In pig-dense areas where there are multiple barns in close proximity to each other, even herds that are free of IAV-S are at high risk of getting infected from neighboring barns,” explains Tara Donovan, DVM, a veterinarian and vice president for health management at The Hanor Company.

Another reason why IAV-S is so difficult to control is its ability to mutate and form new strains. The classic IAV-S strain, H1N1, had been primarily seasonal and relatively unchanged while circulating in U.S. swine populations for over 75 years. In 1998, the classical H1N1 significantly evolved by recombining with another strain of IAV-S (H3N2) forming new IAV strains, and making IAV-S more complex and difficult to control. In part, due to that increased complexity, today IAV-S is endemic in most swine populations in North and South America, Asia and Europe.3

Because achieving solid cross-protection against such a dynamic threat is difficult, following strict on-farm biosecurity measures is the best current management strategy to prevent your herds from becoming infected with IAV-S. Talk to your veterinarian today to learn more


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