Category:Asfarviridae
Revision as of 13:24, 21 May 2010 by Bara (talk | contribs) (Created page with '=Introduction= Asfarviridae receives it's name from '''A'''frican '''S'''wine '''F'''ever virus, which is derived from any of this family of viruses. ASF…')
Introduction
Asfarviridae receives it's name from African Swine Fever virus, which is derived from any of this family of viruses. ASF is a serious exotic virus that should not be confused with Classical Swine Fever.
Morphology
- Large, enveloped, icosahedral, cytoplasmic DNA virus
Virulence and Pathogenesis
- Infects either upper respiratory tract or skin via ticks
- Enters bloodstream in monocytes
- Reaches viscera and bone marrow within days
- Induces a clotting defect and hemolysis in red blood cells
- Also affects lymphocytes:
- Infects Th cells and causes them not to produce B-stimulating cytokines
- Antigen-stimulated B-cells undergo apoptosis rather than producing antibody
- General cell signal transduction is blocked, decreasing non-specific immunity
Acute Virus (Africa)
- Clinical Signs:
- Nasal discharge, diarrhoea, reddening of the skin
- Death within 7 days
- PM: widespread internal hemorrhage
Subacute Virus (Europe)
- PM: Petechial hemorrhages may be seen under kidney capsule
- Mortality: 30-70%
- Survivors may lose body condition, have skin ulcers and joint swelling
Epidemiology
- Can persist on infected premises for months
- Subacute recovered pigs become antibody-positive carriers
- Transfer:
- Africa: vertical transfer between soft ticks
- Europe/Africa: direct contact with carrier pigs, aerosol, infected swill, etc.
Diagnosis
- Mortalities with widespread hemorrhage, particularly in lymph nodes
- Test to distinguish from Classical Swine Fever and Porcine Circoviruses
- Immunofluorescence
- PCR
Control
- No vaccine is available
Prevention:
- Boiling swill
- Isolation of sick pigs, domestic pigs from wild pigs
- Keep pigs on concrete, not soil (to lessen tick contact)
Pages in category "Asfarviridae"
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