23 results on '"Neumann, EJ"'
Search Results
2. African swine fever: a New Zealand perspective on epidemiological risk factors for its occurrence
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Kurian, A, primary, Hall, WF, additional, and Neumann, EJ, additional
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- 2021
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3. Descriptive and temporal analysis of post-mortem lesions recorded in slaughtered pigs in New Zealand from 2000 to 2010
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Neumann, EJ, primary, Hall, WF, additional, Stevenson, MA, additional, Morris, RS, additional, and Ling Min Than, J, additional
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- 2013
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4. The frequency and distance of movements of pigs and semen between commercial and non-commercial piggeries in New Zealand
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Neumann, EJ, primary, Pearson, AB, additional, Sanson, RL, additional, Nicoll, KJ, additional, and Clement, FL, additional
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- 2013
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5. Development of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for the serological detection of exposure of poultry in New Zealand toErysipelothrix rhusiopathiaeand their serological response to vaccination
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Kurian, A, primary, Neumann, EJ, additional, Hall, WF, additional, and Christensen, N, additional
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- 2012
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- View/download PDF
6. Serological survey of exposure toErysipelothrix rhusiopathiaein poultryin New Zealand
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Kurian, A, primary, Neumann, EJ, additional, Hall, WF, additional, and Marks, D, additional
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- 2012
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7. Re: Re: Analysis of the risk of introduction and spread of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus through importation of raw pigmeat into New Zealand
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Neumann, EJ, primary and Morris, RS, additional
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- 2008
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8. Analysis of the risk of introduction and spread of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus through importation of raw pigmeat into New Zealand
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Neumann, EJ, primary, Morris, RS, additional, and Sujau, M, additional
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- 2007
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9. Descriptive summary of an outbreak of porcine post-weaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS) in New Zealand
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Neumann, EJ, primary, Dobbinson, SSA, additional, Welch, EBM, additional, and Morris, RS, additional
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- 2007
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10. Acute B-cell lymphoblastic leukaemia in a 5-month-old boar
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Rafferty, AL, primary, Collett, MG, additional, Forsyth, SF, additional, Neumann, EJ, additional, and Suepaul, RB, additional
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- 2007
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11. Descriptive and temporal analysis of post-mortem lesions recorded in slaughtered pigs in New Zealand from 2000 to 2010.
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Neumann, EJ, Hall, WF, Stevenson, MA, Morris, RS, and Ling Min Than, J
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SWINE diseases ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research ,PNEUMONIA in animals ,SLAUGHTERING ,ANIMAL health ,SWINE farms ,FARM management - Abstract
AIMS: To complete a retrospective analysis of data from a national abattoir-based lesion recording system (PigCheck) in the New Zealand pig industry, in order to establish the prevalence of 20 post-mortem disease lesions, describe long-term trends in the prevalence of these lesions, and identify the proportion of the monthly variation in lesion prevalence that could be attributed to individual farms or abattoirs. METHODS: Slaughter lesion data were collected and reported at the lot level (a cohort of pigs delivered from one farm, at one time). Data on the prevalence of lesions between January 2000 and December 2010 was aggregated by month, and time-series analysis of the data for each lesion was conducted. The time series pattern for each lesion was described with an auto-regressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) model; seasonality of lesion occurrence was assessed separately. To determine the proportion of variance in lesion prevalence that could be attributed to farms relative to that attributed to abattoirs, a hierarchical binomial generalised linear mixed model was created incorporating two random effect levels, at the farm (within abattoir) and abattoir levels. RESULTS: A dataset comprised of 124,407 lots (6,220,664 pigs, 279 farms, five abattoirs) was compiled for analysis. The most prevalent conditions across the 11-year time series were antero-ventral pneumonia (7.6%), pleuropneumonia (11.4%), and milk spots (9.2%). Of the 15 lesions shown to have a significant annual change in prevalence, 10 decreased over time and five increased. The variance in prevalence that was observed for pyogenic lesion (92%), mange (73%), and ileitis (62%) was attributed primarily to variation between abattoirs. By contrast, the farm of origin explained the greatest percentage of variance in prevalence for rectal prolapse (98%), pneumonia (97%), and antero-ventral pneumonia (96%). CONCLUSIONS: The overall prevalence of most lesions recorded in PigCheck for the period was low relative to published data from other countries. Common lung pathologies contributing to lesions such as antero-ventral pneumonia and pleuropneumonia were primarily a function of farm management and were not likely due to variability in lesion recording at different abattoirs. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Based on the low frequency of lesions in pigs at commercial abattoirs, the health status of pigs in the New Zealand pig industry is considered to be very good. Pneumonia, pleurisy, and ascariasis are some of the most prevalent conditions that should be focussed on through development of herd health management plans. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2014
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12. Serological survey of exposure to Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae in poultryin New Zealand.
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Kurian, A, Neumann, EJ, Hall, WF, and Marks, D
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VETERINARY medicine ,SEROLOGY ,SEROPREVALENCE ,ERYSIPELOTHRIX rhusiopathiae ,CHICKEN diseases - Abstract
The article discusses a study that estimated the seroprevalence of antibodies to Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae in chickens in New Zealand. A cross-sectional serological survey done in 2010-2011 involved a sample of 545 broiler, breeder, and layer chickens in 55 flocks. The results suggests a possible higher-than-expected prevalence of erysipelas under New Zealand field conditions. The disease is also significantly linked with increasing age but not to housing type and geographical location.
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- 2012
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13. Development of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for the serological detection of exposure of poultry in New Zealand to Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae and their serological response to vaccination.
- Author
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Kurian, A, Neumann, EJ, Hall, WF, and Christensen, N
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VETERINARY medicine ,SWINE erysipelas ,ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay ,POULTRY diseases ,ANIMAL vaccination - Abstract
The article discuses a study which modified and validated an existing swine erysipelas enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for use with poultry serum and assessed the safety of a swine erysipelas vaccine for use in New Zealand layer birds. Results indicated that the ELISA developed had satisfactory diagnostic performance characteristics and the vaccine appeared to be safe for use in layer birds. The vaccine's efficacy to protect birds from clinical erysipelas was not assessed.
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- 2012
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14. Validation of a Combined In Vivo/In Vitro Ileal Fermentation Assay in the Growing Pig to be Used as a Model for Adult Humans.
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Hoogeveen AM, Moughan PJ, Stroebinger N, Neumann EJ, McNabb WC, and Montoya CA
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- Humans, Swine, Animals, Fermentation, Feces, Research Design, Animal Feed analysis, Digestion, Ileum metabolism, Diet veterinary
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Background: An in vivo/in vitro ileal fermentation assay using growing pigs has been developed but not yet formally validated., Objectives: This study aimed to validate the in vivo/in vitro ileal fermentation assay by comparing in vitro fermentation values with those obtained in vivo in growing pigs. The effect of raising pigs under different environmental conditions was also investigated., Methods: Thirty piglets (1.59 ± 0.31 kg body weight, mean ± standard deviation) were subjected to 1 of 3 treatments: artificially reared (AR) (nonfarm, laboratory housing conditions) from postnatal day (PND) 7 (AR group), inoculated orally with human infant fecal extracts from birth until PND 8 and AR (AR+ group), or conventionally reared on a farm (control group). Starting at PND 7, the AR and AR+ pigs received human infant formula for 3 wk, followed by a human-type diet for 5 wk. Control pigs were weaned on the farm and, on PND 63, relocated to the laboratory animal facility. From PND 63, all pigs received a human-type diet. On PND 78, pigs were killed, after which ileal digesta were collected to perform an in vitro ileal fermentation (in vitro organic matter [OM] fermentability and organic acid production) and to determine digesta microbial composition and dietary OM fermentability in vivo., Results: The rearing regimen resulted in only a few differences in ileal microbial taxonomic composition. The rearing regimen generally did not affect the in vitro production of individual organic acids. The in vivo and in vitro OM fermentability of proximal ileal digesta (19.7 ± 2.04%; mean ± SEM) was similar (P > 0.05) for the AR and control pigs but not for the AR+ pigs., Conclusions: The control-rearing regimen was preferred over AR or AR+ because of ease of implementation. The in vitro ileal fermentation assay accurately predicted the in vivo OM fermentability., (Copyright © 2024 American Society for Nutrition. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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15. A Systematic Review of Acute Irreducible Shoulder Dislocations in the 21st Century.
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Liechti DJ, Shepet KH, Glener JE, Neumann EJ, and Sraj S
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Background: Rarely, closed reduction cannot be achieved in patients with acute shoulder dislocation, necessitating open management. A paucity of literature exists regarding these cases., Purpose: To perform a systematic review on the mechanism, management, and outcome data of acute irreducible shoulder dislocations., Study Design: Systematic review; Level of evidence, 4., Methods: A systematic review of the literature was performed using the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, PubMed, and MEDLINE between 2000 and 2020. Inclusion criteria were as follows: human participants, acute irreducible shoulder dislocation requiring open management, English language, and publication within the past 20 years. We excluded basic science articles, technique articles, reviews, editorials, and studies of chronic shoulder dislocations or dislocations with ipsilateral humeral shaft fractures., Results: Twelve articles fit the inclusion criteria and were considered for review. All studies were single case reports (level 4 evidence). Ten of the 12 studies were of male patients. The direction of dislocation included 7 anterior/anteroinferior, 2 posterior, 1 inferior, 1 bilateral inferior, and 1 superolateral. Most dislocations were irreducible owing to a mechanical block to reduction. The most common type of block was an incarcerated long head of the biceps tendon, followed by interposition of 1 of the rotator cuff tendons. The axillary and musculocutaneous nerves, displaced fracture fragments, and Hill-Sachs and bony Bankart lesions were other causes of blocks to reduction. Eleven patients were treated with open surgery, while 1 patient was treated arthroscopically. Procedures performed were dependent on concurrent pathology. Final follow-up ranged from 6 weeks to 2 years, with no repeat dislocation episodes reported. Complications after open reduction included 1 case of brachial plexopathy (posterior cord) and 1 case of musculocutaneous nerve palsy., Conclusion: There is a paucity of literature on the management of irreducible acute shoulder dislocations. The most common irreducible dislocation found in this systematic review was anterior with a mechanical block attributed to interposition of the long head of the biceps tendon. When patients were treated with an open or arthroscopic procedure, recurrence was low, with none reporting recurrent dislocation in limited follow-up., Competing Interests: One or more of the authors has declared the following potential conflict of interest or source of funding: K.H.S. has received education payments from Smith & Nephew. AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto., (© The Author(s) 2022.)
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- 2022
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16. Effects of blood sample mishandling on ELISA results for infectious bronchitis virus, avian encephalomyelitis virus and chicken anaemia virus.
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Kurian A, Neumann EJ, Hall WF, and Marks D
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- Animals, Antibodies, Viral blood, Blood Specimen Collection methods, Circoviridae Infections blood, Circoviridae Infections diagnosis, Circoviridae Infections veterinary, Circoviridae Infections virology, Coronavirus Infections blood, Coronavirus Infections diagnosis, Coronavirus Infections veterinary, Coronavirus Infections virology, Freezing, Hemolysis, Picornaviridae Infections blood, Picornaviridae Infections diagnosis, Picornaviridae Infections veterinary, Picornaviridae Infections virology, Poultry Diseases blood, Poultry Diseases diagnosis, Poultry Diseases virology, Blood Specimen Collection veterinary, Chicken anemia virus immunology, Chickens, Encephalomyelitis Virus, Avian immunology, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay veterinary, Infectious bronchitis virus immunology
- Abstract
This study determined the effect of sample mishandling on the performance of ELISAs for detection of antibodies against infectious bronchitis virus (IBV), avian encephalomyelitis virus (AEV) and chicken anaemia virus (CAV) in the serum of chickens. The effects of five different sample mishandling treatments were assessed: heat treatment, repetitive freezing and thawing and three levels of severity of haemolysis. These mishandling treatments simulated different conditions that might occur during routine blood collection, transport or storage in a clinical practice setting. Each mishandling treatment was experimentally applied under laboratory conditions and then samples were assayed for antibodies against IBV, AEV and CAV using commercial ELISA kits. Severe haemolysis had the most consistent detrimental effect on ELISA performance, producing results that were significantly different from the reference standard in all three ELISAs, although the direction of the effect varied (less positive for the IBV and CAV assays; more positive for the AEV assay). Moderate levels of haemolysis had a similar, but less consistent, effect to that of severe haemolysis, producing results that were significantly different from the reference standard only for the IBV (less positive) and AEV (more positive) ELISAs. Repetitive freeze-thawing also produced a significant effect on ELISA results for IBV (less positive) and AEV (more positive). The IBV ELISA appeared to be most susceptible to the effects of serum maltreatment. The findings from this study suggest that unpredictable variation in the results of ELISAs can occur due to different sample mishandling treatments., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2012
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17. Serological survey of exposure to Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae in poultry in New Zealand.
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Kurian A, Neumann EJ, Hall WF, and Marks D
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- Animals, Antibodies, Bacterial blood, Erysipelothrix, Erysipelothrix Infections blood, New Zealand epidemiology, Poultry Diseases microbiology, Prevalence, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Chickens, Erysipelothrix Infections epidemiology, Poultry Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Aims: To estimate the seroprevalence of antibodies to Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae in chickens in New Zealand, and to estimate the effect of housing type, geographical location and age on seroprevalence., Methods: A cross-sectional serological survey of a convenience sample of 545 broiler, breeder, and layer chickens in 55 flocks was conducted in 2010-2011. Birds were aged 5-83 weeks; housing types were free-range, shed, caged, and unknown; and flocks were located in the Auckland, Manawatu, North Canterbury, Otago, Taranaki, Waikato, and Wairarapa regions of New Zealand. An ELISA was used to measure antibodies to E. rhusiopathiae. Samples with an optical density reading ≥ 1.50 were considered to be positive. Logistic regression analysis was used to model the effect of housing type, geographical location and flock age on the prevalence of samples positive for antibodies to E. rhusiopathiae., Results: The overall prevalence of samples with antibodies to E. rhusiopathiae was 39.8 (95% CI=35.68-44.06)% for the 545 samples, and 46/55 (84%) farms that were tested had at least one positive sample. Mean seroprevalence for types of housing was 44.2 (95% CI=37.79-50.70)% for free-range (n=240 birds), 23.7 (95% CI=17.83-30.38)% for shed (n=190), 73 (95% CI=56-86)% for caged (n=37) and 50 (95% CI=38-62)% for unknown (n=78). The disease was present in all seven geographical locations from which samples were obtained for this study. Seroprevalence increased with increasing age of birds (p<0.001); for birds ≤ 12 weeks of age it was 2 (95% CI=0.3-8)% (n=91), 13-24 weeks 29.1 (95% CI=23.34-35.46)% (n=230), 25-36 weeks 47 (95% CI=32-64)% (n=40), 37-48 weeks 75 (95% CI=51-91)% (n=20), >48 weeks 63.8 (95% CI=54.78-72.12)% (n=127). Neither housing type nor geographical location had a significant effect on the likelihood of samples being positive for antibodies to E. rhusiopathiae., Conclusions: The results of this study suggest the prevalence of erysipelas under New Zealand field conditions may be higher than expected and that the disease is significantly associated with increasing age. Housing type and geographical location appear to be unrelated to seroprevalence., Clinical Relevance: Further study of the epidemiology of E. rhusiopathiae in chickens in New Zealand should be considered in order to minimise the extent of birds' exposure to the organism. These findings will assist in the design of further studies.
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- 2012
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18. Effect of blood sample handling post-collection on Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae antibody titres.
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Neumann EJ and Bonistalli KN
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- Animals, Edetic Acid, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Erysipelothrix Infections blood, Hemolysis, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Serologic Tests standards, Serologic Tests veterinary, Specimen Handling standards, Swine, Temperature, Time Factors, Antibodies, Bacterial blood, Erysipelothrix immunology, Erysipelothrix Infections diagnosis, Specimen Handling veterinary
- Abstract
A study was conducted to determine the effect of blood sample mishandling on the performance of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for the detection of antibodies against Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae. Eleven sample maltreatments (storage at -10 degrees C, storage at 4 degrees C, heat treatment of clotted blood, haemolysis, repetitive freeze-thaw cycling, and substitution of plasma in place of serum) were simulated in a laboratory environment and then run concurrently against a gold standard sample (storage at -80 degrees C). The mishandling treatment groups that simulated high levels of haemolysis had significantly lower optical density (OD) readings when compared to the gold standard. However, the magnitude of the effects was relatively small and only samples with OD values close to the cut-off changed state from positive to negative. Heat treatment had a minor, but non-significant, effect on OD values. Findings from this study suggested that immunoglobulin G antibody was stable in the face of most common sample mishandling events.
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- 2009
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19. Safety of a live attenuated Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae vaccine for swine.
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Neumann EJ, Grinberg A, Bonistalli KN, Mack HJ, Lehrbach PR, and Gibson N
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- Administration, Intranasal, Animals, Bacterial Vaccines administration & dosage, Body Temperature, Erysipelothrix isolation & purification, Erysipelothrix pathogenicity, Erysipelothrix Infections physiopathology, Nasal Mucosa microbiology, Nose microbiology, Safety, Swine, Virulence, Weight Gain, Bacterial Vaccines therapeutic use, Erysipelothrix immunology, Erysipelothrix Infections immunology, Swine Diseases immunology, Vaccines, Attenuated therapeutic use
- Abstract
Infection with Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae has a significant economic impact on pig production systems worldwide. Both inactivated and attenuated vaccines are available to prevent development of clinical signs of swine erysipelas. The ability of a live attenuated E. rhusiopathiae strain to become persistently established in pigs after intranasal exposure and its potential to cause clinical signs consistent with swine erysipelas after being administered directly into the nasopharynx of healthy pigs was evaluated. Five, E. rhusiopathiae-negative pigs were vaccinated by deep intranasal inoculation then followed for 14 days. Nasal swabs were collected daily for 5 days and clinical observations were made daily for 14 days post-vaccination. Nasal swabs were cultured for E. rhusiopathiae with the intent of back-passaging any recovered organisms into subsequent replicates. No organism was recovered from nasal swabs in the first vaccination replicate. A second replicate including 10 pigs was initiated and followed in an identical manner to that described above. Again, no E. rhusiopathiae was recovered from any pigs. No pigs in either replicate showed any signs of clinical swine erysipelas. The live attenuated E. rhusiopathiae strain evaluated in this study did not appear to become persistently established in pigs post-vaccination, did not cause any local or systemic signs consistent with swine erysipelas, and was therefore unlikely to revert to a virulent state when used in a field setting.
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- 2009
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20. Pig characteristics associated with mortality and light exit weight for the nursery phase.
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Larriestra AJ, Wattanaphansak S, Neumann EJ, Bradford J, Morrison RB, and Deen J
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- Age Factors, Animal Husbandry methods, Animals, Birth Weight, Female, Male, Predictive Value of Tests, Sensitivity and Specificity, Weight Gain physiology, Body Weight physiology, Mortality, Swine physiology, Weaning
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One thousand and ten weaned pigs that were reared in 1 nursery in Iowa from weaning (17 +/- 2 days ) until 10 weeks of age were evaluated. A weaning weight threshold of 3.6 kg maximized the sensitivity and specificity to correctly predict the likelihood of dying or being light in weight at exit from the nursery (< or = 14.5 kg). Weaning weight < or = 3.6 kg (OR = 2.92), barrow (OR = 1.75), and sow unit (A versus B, OR = 2.14) were significant predictors of mortality in the nursery. Birth weight < or = 1.0 kg (OR = 2.66), weaning weight < or = 3.6 kg (OR = 8.75), gilt (OR = 1.4), sow unit (OR = 2.38), and gilt as nursing sow at weaning (OR = 1.66) were significant predictors of being lightweight at nursery exit. Eighteen per cent of the nursery deaths and almost half of lightweight nursery pigs could be prevented if there were no lightweight pigs at weaning.
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- 2006
21. Assessment of the economic impact of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome on swine production in the United States.
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Neumann EJ, Kliebenstein JB, Johnson CD, Mabry JW, Bush EJ, Seitzinger AH, Green AL, and Zimmerman JJ
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- Animals, Costs and Cost Analysis, Disease Outbreaks economics, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, Female, Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome epidemiology, Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome prevention & control, Reproduction, Swine, United States epidemiology, Vaccination economics, Vaccination veterinary, Animal Husbandry economics, Disease Outbreaks veterinary, Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome economics
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Objective: To estimate the annual cost of infections attributable to porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) virus to US swine producers., Design: Economic analysis., Sample Population: Data on the health and productivity of PRRS-affected and PRRS-unaffected breeding herds and growing-pig populations were collected from a convenience sample of swine farms in the midwestern United States., Procedure: Health and productivity variables of PRRS-affected and PRRS-unaffected swine farms were analyzed to estimate the impact of PRRS on specific farms. National estimates of PRRS incidence were then used to determine the annual economic impact of PRRS on US swine producers., Results: PRRS affected breeding herds and growing-pig populations as measured by a decrease in reproductive health, an increase in deaths, and reductions in the rate and efficiency of growth. Total annual economic impact of these effects on US swine producers was estimated at dollar 66.75 million in breeding herds and dollar 493.57 million in growing-pig populations., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: PRRS imposes a substantial financial burden on US swine producers and causes approximately dollar 560.32 million in losses each year. By comparison, prior to eradication, annual losses attributable to classical swine fever (hog cholera) and pseudorabies were estimated at dollar 364.09 million and dollar 36.27 million, respectively (adjusted on the basis of year 2004 dollars). Current PRRS control strategies are not predictably successful; thus, PRRS-associated losses will continue into the future. Research to improve our understanding of ecologic and epidemiologic characteristics of the PRRS virus and technologic advances (vaccines and diagnostic tests) to prevent clinical effects are warranted.
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- 2005
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22. Persistent activity of doramectin and ivermectin against Ascaris suum in experimentally infected pigs.
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Lichtensteiger CA, DiPietro JA, Paul AJ, Neumann EJ, and Thompson L
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- Animals, Anthelmintics pharmacology, Ascariasis drug therapy, Ascariasis prevention & control, Intestine, Small parasitology, Ivermectin pharmacology, Linear Models, Random Allocation, Stomach parasitology, Swine, Swine Diseases prevention & control, Anthelmintics therapeutic use, Ascariasis veterinary, Ascaris suum drug effects, Ivermectin analogs & derivatives, Ivermectin therapeutic use, Swine Diseases drug therapy
- Abstract
A study was conducted to investigate the persistent nematocidal activity of two avermectins against experimentally-induced infections of Ascaris suum in swine. Seventy-two nematode-free cross-bred pigs of similar bodyweight were randomly allotted to nine treatment groups of eight pigs each. Eight of the groups were treated with injectable solutions containing 300 microg of doramectin/kg (IM) or 300 microg of ivermectin/kg (SC) either 0 (same day), 7, 14, or 21 days prior to an oral challenge of 50000 embryonated A. suum eggs. The ninth group (control) was challenged in parallel without any avermectin treatment. At 41 or 42 days after challenge, pigs were euthanatized and adult and larval stages of A. suum were collected from the gastrointestinal tract of each pig and counted. Both avermectins significantly (P < 0.0002) reduced nematode counts when given on the day of challenge (0 days prior), and the efficacy was 100% and 97.5% for doramectin and ivermectin, respectively. Doramectin given 7 days prior to challenge significantly (P < 0.0001) reduced nematode counts, and the efficacy was 98.4%. For all other avermectin-treatment groups, nematode counts were not significantly reduced compared to those in control pigs. These data indicated that anthelmintic activity of ivermectin against A. suum persisted for less than 7 days and the activity of doramectin persisted for more than 7, but less than 14 days.
- Published
- 1999
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23. Relationship between fumonisin contamination of feed and mystery swine disease. A case-control study.
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Bane DP, Neumann EJ, Hall WF, Harlin KS, and Slife RL
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- Animal Feed analysis, Animals, Animals, Suckling, Antibodies, Viral blood, Case-Control Studies, Encephalomyocarditis virus immunology, Female, Food Microbiology, Illinois, Lactation, Mycotoxins analysis, Orosomucoid analysis, Pregnancy, Risk Factors, Swine, Syndrome, Animal Feed adverse effects, Fumonisins, Mycotoxins adverse effects, Swine Diseases etiology
- Abstract
Fumonisin is a recently identified mycotoxin that has been shown to be the cause of pulmonary edema disease in swine and leukoencephalomalacia in horses. Mystery Swine Disease (MSD), is an economically devastating disease complex of unknown etiology that has been reported to have occurred in several swine producing states since 1988. To determine the relationship between MSD and fumonisin, a case-control study was carried out in Illinois in mid-1990. Feed samples collected from 12 case and 9 control farms were analyzed for fumonisin. Sera from swine on all farms was screened for titers against encephalomyocarditis (EMC) virus and concentrations of alpha-1 acid glycoprotein (an acute phase reactive protein). Fumonisin concentrations greater than or equal to 20 ppm were found on 1 control farm (1/9) and 8 case farms (8/12). Titers against EMC virus (greater than or equal to 1:16) were found on 5 control farms (5/9) and on 6 case farms (6/12). Farms with greater than or equal to 20 ppm fumonisin in the feed were at significantly increased risk (OR = 11.2, Fisher's exact test p = 0.037) for MSD. Furthermore, the pi2 test for trend was (p = 0.017), meaning that as the level of fumonisin in the feed increased, the risk of MSD also increased. The presence of EMC virus titers in the sow herd was not a significant risk for MSD (OR = 1.25, Fisher's exact test p = 0.75). Alpha-1 acid glycoprotein concentrations obtained from a 2-week old nursing pigs differed significantly (p = 0.0005) between MSD case and control herds.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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