1. Swine vesicular disease, studies on pathogenesis, diagnosis, and epizootiology: a review.
- Author
-
Dekker A
- Subjects
- Animals, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay veterinary, False Positive Reactions, Immunohistochemistry veterinary, In Situ Hybridization veterinary, Swine, Time Factors, Swine Vesicular Disease diagnosis, Swine Vesicular Disease epidemiology, Swine Vesicular Disease etiology, Swine Vesicular Disease prevention & control
- Abstract
Swine vesicular disease (SVD) is a contagious viral disease of swine. It causes vesicular lesions indistinguishable from those observed of foot-and-mouth disease. Infection with SVD virus (SVDV) can lead to viraemia within 1 day and can produce clinical signs 2 days after a pig has come into contact with infected pigs or a virus-contaminated environment. Virus can be detected 3.5 hours after infection using immunohistochemistry. In these in vitro studies, this technique was superior to in-situ hybridization. In SVDV-infected tissues, however, more infected cells were positive using in-situ hybridization, and these were already seen 4.5 hours after infection. For serological diagnosis of SVD several new enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA's) have been developed. The newest ELISAs, based on monoclonal antibodies, are superior to the previous tests. The new tests produce fewer less false-negative results and enable large-scale serological screening. In screening programmes a small percentage of false positive reactors have been detected. The cause of these false-positive reactions has not been identified, though infections with human Coxsackie B5 virus can be excluded.
- Published
- 2000
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