Leptospirosis - Pigs
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Description
Leptospirosis is an infective disease caused by the bacteria Leptospira. There are a number of serovars of the bacteria which vary in their pathogenesis and host specificity. L.bratislava and L.pomona are both host adapted to swine and are the most common cause of clinical leptospirosis in pigs. Other serovars whih are host adapted to other species can also cause disease in pigs: L.icterohaemorrhagiae transmitted by rats, L.canicola by dogs, L.grippotyphosa by wildlife and rarely L.hardjo by cattle.
Signalment
Leptospirosis has a worldwide distribution; it is more prevalent in warm wet climates. The incidence of disease depends on the serovar involved.
Diagnosis
Clinical Signs
Treatment
A vaccine exists in the USA but is not available in the UK; the protection provided is short lived, it minimises but does not eliminate clinical disease in all cases.
Prognosis
References
- Pigs
- The rodent-adapted serovars icterohaemorrhagica and copenhagenii cause acute disease in pigs
- Severe disease in young pigs
- Serovar pomona is the host-adapted species, and may be shed in the urine
- Infections may cause abortions and stillbirths
- Pigs are maintenance hosts for serovars tarassovi and bratislava, which may cause reproductive failure
- Pigs