Description
An infectious disease caused by Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae. The disease is characterised by sudden death, septicaemia, [[Joints Inflammatory - Pathology#Arthritis|arthritis], endocarditis, diamond shaped skin lesions, laminitis and abortion in pregnant sows. Carrier pigs act as reservoir of infection and Organisms are excreted in faeces of acutely-affected pig. Infection occurs via ingestion of contaminated food and water, or through skin abrasions.
Signalment
Affects pigs of all ages, most common in pigs kept in poor conditions and in batches of newly bought gilts. May occur in certain conditions often during hot humid weather or in particular buildings or fields.
Diagnosis
Development of the typical diamond shaped lesion on the skin is pathognomic for this disease. Erysipelas should be considered in any cases where fever and lameness occur together, or in farrowing sows who are struggling in combination with a fever. Post-mortem diagnosis may be needed for definitive diagnosis, in particular spleen, kidney, liver, spleen, heart valves,a long bone and synovial tissues should be submitted for bacterial examination. Slender Gram-positive rods can be seen on microscopy of acute lesions; filamentous forms in chronic lesions and on smears. High levels of antibiody may be found in joint fluid and so may aid diagnosis. ELISAs and PCR tests are also avilable which can be used directly on tissue or following culture.
History and Clinical signs
Clinical outcome depends on susceptibility of pigs and virulence of strain. Pigs are susceptible after maternal antibody waned (after 3 months) and before protective immunity acquired (3 years). Changes in diet, extremes of temperature and fatigue are thought to predispose to infection 3 forms of disease occur: Hyperacute Acute Chronic
- Acute; incubation period 2-3 days
- Pigs found dead, febrile, depressed, recumbent or with stilted gait
- Mortality high
- Pregant sows abort
- Cutaneous form:
- Diamond skin lesions
- Fewer systemic signs, mortality rates lower
- Pigs febrile with small, pink/purple raised areas or extensive diamond-shaped plaques over skin
- Lesions may resolve within a week, or become necrotic and slough
- Arthritis:
- Older pigs, chronic
- Stiffness, lameness, non-weight bearing on affected limbs
- Joint lesions with erosion of articular cartilage, fibrosis and ankylosis
- Strong impact on productivity
- Chronic valvular endocarditis:
- Vegetatic thrombosis of mitral valves
- Asymptomatic or congestive heart failure and sudden death with stress
- Diagnosis:
- Diamond-shaped skin lesions
- No growth on MacConkey agar
- Colonial characteristics and biochemical tests
Treatment
- Penicillin and tetracyclines for acute infections
- Hyperimmune serum
- Control:
- Hygience
- Cull chronic cases
- Isolate affected pigs
- Live attenuated or inactivated vaccines
- Most important and most common cause of arthritis
- Causes chronic serofibrinous polyarthritis
- Also causes discospondylitis
- Similar to discospondylitis in dogs
- Thickening of synovial membrane lining + plus hyperaemia and villus formation + lymphocyte and plasma cell infiltration
- Acute stage
- Increased joint fluid + hot swollen joints
- Also expresses as septicaemic and urticarial lesion on the back (diamond shaped)
- May involve endocarditis as a sequel
- Chronic stage
- More commonly encountered
- Erosion of articular surface of joints with formation of pannus +/- joint ankylosis
- Vaccination prevents septicaemic and urticarial forms but has no effect on joints
- Probably due to dead bacteria still stimulating host immune system
- Septicaemia lo9calises in meninges and joints
- Well known in piglets in their first two months of life
- Expresses as acute fibrinopurulent arthritis