Also known as: TGEV

Antigenicity

  • Single serotype

Hosts

  • Pigs

Pathogenesis

  • Malabsorptive diarrhoea
  • All ages susceptible but effects vary on age:
    • Less than 2 weeks of age: typically fatal
    • Over 5 weeks of age: recovery and immunity

Epidemiology

  • Largely replaced by a respiratory variant in Europe
  • Highly contagious spread by orofecal transmission
  • Two forms of infection can occur:
    • Epizootic: Explosive infection
      • Introduction to a non-immune herd spreads quickly
    • Enzootic: Persistent infection
      • Immune sows provide passive immunity but piglets will suffer mild symptoms post-weaning

Diagnosis

  • Fluorescent microscopy on SI sections

Control

Explosive infection:

  • Separate sows 2 weeks from farrowing
  • Exposure of flock will serve to immunise
  • No effective vaccines exist


  • Caused by a coronavirus.
  • Known as Epidemic diarrhoea or TGE.
  • Produces an explosive diarrhoeic disease, which spreads through the farm rapidly.
  • Epidemiologically, the disease is easy to recognise, since all ages of pigs scour.
    • This is the means of diagnosis.
  • Consequences of disease differ with the age of the animal.
    • In very young animals, mortality may be up to 100%.
    • In animals 1-3 weeks old, mortality is around 50%.
    • Over 3 weeks of aged, mortality is 25%.
    • Older pigs tend to recover from the disease.
Pathology
  • Villi are shortened and more rounded, with a degree of fusion.
  • Epithelial cells over the villi are flattened.
  • The lamnia propria is congested and oedemetous.
  • These changes are in contrast to coliform infections, which show much more normal villi.
    • Many gram-negative bacteria can be seen adhering to the villi wall if a gram stain is used.