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Faculty of Veterinary Medicine & Animal
Husbandry
Somali National University
Mogadishu, Gaheyr Campus
Oct. 26. 2019
INFECTIOUS DISEASES II (Viral Diseases)
AFRICAN SWINE FEVER (ASF)
History
1921: Discovered in Kenya
Today: endemic
in most of
sub-Saharan
Africa including
the island
of Madagascar
1957: First occurrence outside Africa
- Portugal
1960s:
Portugal and Spain
1970-1980s:
Spread to Europe
The Netherlands,
Italy, France, Belgium
1990s: Disease eradicated Remains
endemic on the Island of Sardinia
Tick Vector
1963: Virus isolated from soft
tick Ornithodoros erraticus
1971: Western Hemisphere
Cuba, the Dominican
Republic, Haiti, Brazil
Eradicated
2007: Republic of Georgia
Spread in Caucasus
Region (Eurasia),
including Russia
Federation
2015:
Eastern Europe
Lithuania, Latvia,
Poland, Romania
Wild boar in Iran
Outbreaks
China: 2018 first time reported, domestic pigs
Belgium: Wild boars
Hungary, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Russia, Poland,
Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania
Uncooked/undercooked pork products fed to pigs
(imported, illegal)
Portugal , Spain (1960); Italy (1983); Belgium
(1985); Russia (2008); Romania, China (2018)
Raw pork waste/garbage at airport or shipping
ports
Lisbon (1957), Malta, Sardinia (1978), Georgia
(2007)
Movement of infected wild boars Russia (2008)
African swine fever is an important viral disease of
pigs that has become a serious threat to worldwide pork
production since 2007. African swine fever virus
(ASFV) usually circulates in sub-Saharan Africa, where
it is thought to have originated in wild warthogs but has
become a common virus in domesticated pigs.
ASF viruses range from highly pathogenic strains that may
kill nearly the entire herd to less virulent isolates that cause
a milder, nonspecific illness difficult to recognize as African
swine fever.
Etiology
African swine fever results from infection by African
swine fever virus (ASFV), an enveloped virus in the
genus Asfivirus and family Asfarviridae.
More than 20 genotypes of ASFV have been identified,
many from wildlife cycles in Africa. Some of these
viruses also occur in domesticated pigs.
The virus introduced in 2007 into the Caucasus belongs
to genotype II, while a virus that has been endemic in
Sardinia (Italy) since the 1960s is of genotype I.
Map: ASF Infection Distribution OIE: Jan-Sept 2018.
Geographic Distribution
Morbidity up to 100% Previously unexposed herds
Mortality varies with genotype virulence Ranges
from <5% to 100%
All ages affected
Subacute mortality = 30% to 70%
May be asymptomatic in wild pigs
Economic Impact
Animal health
High morbidity and mortality
Highly contagious
Import and export bans
Movement restrictions
Quarantine and depopulation
Required for eradication
1971-Cuba: 400,000 pigs
2018-Romania: over 120,000 pigs
Can become prolonged epidemic
Species Affected
Domestic pigs
Feral swine
Wild pigs
Eurasian wild boars
Warthogs (reservoir)
Bush pigs (reservoir)
Giant forest hogs
European boar warthog
bush pig
Domestic pig
Transmission
Direct contact with infected pig
Usually oronasal
All secretions/excretions, blood, tissues
Environmental contamination with products
Ingestion of contaminated
pork products
Fed to pigs – swill, waste, garbage
Carcasses
Fomites
Clothing, vehicles, equipment
Environmental contamination
Blood, diarrhea, feces
Vectors
Biological: Bite from soft ticks
Ornithodoros
Mechanical: Other insects
Mosquitoes, biting flies (Stomoxys)
Ornithodoros soft ticks
Transstadial
Transovarial
Sexual transmission
Infected for life
Colonies maintain virus for years
Tick-to-pig transmission
Important in Africa
Maintained between warthogs and tick
Clinical Features
Incubation period
5-21 days following direct contact
< 5 days after tick bite
Forms of disease
Peracute – sudden death
Acute
Subacute
Chronic
Sudden deaths with few lesions (peracute cases)
may be the first sign of an infection in some herds.
Acute cases are characterized by a high fever,
anorexia, lethargy, weakness and recumbency.
Erythema can be seen, and is most apparent in white
pigs.
There may also be other hemorrhagic signs, including
epistaxis and hemorrhages in the skin.
Respiratory signs (including dyspnea), nasal and
conjunctival discharges, and neurological signs have
been reported.Pregnant animals frequently abort.
Subacute African swine fever is similar, but with less severe
clinical signs. Fever, thrombocytopenia and leukopenia may
be transient; however, hemorrhages can occur during the
period of thrombocytopenia. Abortions are sometimes the first
sign of an outbreak in this form. Affected pigs usually die or
recover within 3 to 4 weeks.
Pigs with the chronic form have nonspecific signs such as
an intermittent low fever, appetite loss and depression.
Other signs may be limited to emaciation and stunting,
but some pigs develop respiratory problems and swollen
joints. Coughing is common, and diarrhea and occasional
vomiting have been reported.
Pig. There is bloody, mucoid, foamy nasal discharge.
Pig, limbs. There is marked hyperemia of the distal limbs.
Pig, perineal skin. There is a large sharply demarcated zone of hyperemia.
Pig. There are multiple sharply demarcated foci of cutaneous hemorrhage and/or necrosis;
hemorrhagic lesions may contain dark red (necrotic) centers
Pig. There are multiple sharply demarcated foci of cutaneous hemorrhage and/or
necrosis; hemorrhagic lesions may contain dark red (necrotic) centers.
Pig, skin. Necrotic exudate is sloughing from the lesion on the left.
Postmortem Lesions
The gross lesions are highly variable, and are influenced by
the virulence of the isolate and the course of the disease.
Numerous organs may be affected, to varying extent, in
animals with acute or subacute African swine fever.
The carcass is often in good condition in animals that die
acutely.
Pig, kidney. There is moderate perirenal (retroperitoneal) edema.
Pig, kidney. Petechiae are disseminated throughout the cortex, and there are larger
coalescing pelvic hemorrhages.
Pig, kidney. Close-up of cortical petechiae.
Pig, kidney. There is severe disseminated cortical petechiation; the pale foci are
infarcts.
Pig, urinary bladder. There are disseminated mucosal petechiae.
Pig, heart. There is abundant straw-colored pericardial fluid (hydropericardium), and
multifocal epicardial hemorrhage.
Pig, heart. Subendocardial hemorrhage.
Pig, lung. The lung is noncollapsed and edematous; there is dorsal hemorrhage and ventral
consolidation.
Pig, stomach. There is "paintbrush" hemorrhage on the serosa.
Pig, mandibular lymph node. There is moderate peripheral (medullary) hemorrhage
Pig, stomach. The hepatogastric lymph node is markedly enlarged and hemorrhagic, and the
adjacent lesser omentum is edematous
Pig, stomach. The stomach is filled with clotted blood, and the wall is markedly
edematous.
Pig, spiral colon. The colon is distended with bloody contents (due to a hemorrhagic
gastric ulcer).
Pig, cecum. Mucosa is markedly edematous and hyperemic, and lymph nodes are hemorrhagic.
Zoonotic potential
There is no evidence that ASFV infects humans.
There is no public health or food safety concern.
Differential Diagnosis
Classical swine fever
(hog cholera)
Porcine dermatitis and
nephropathy syndrome
Erysipelas
Salmonellosis
Eperythrozoonosis
Actinobacillosis
Glasser’s disease
Aujeszky’s disease
(pseudorabies)
Thrombocytopenic purpura
Warfarin poisoning
Heavy metal toxicity
Sampling
Before collecting or sending any samples, the proper
authorities should be contacted.
Samples should only be sent under secure conditions and to
authorized laboratories to prevent the spread of the disease
Reportable disease.
If ASF suspected, IMMEDIATELY notify animal health
authorities
Virus isolation
Blood, tissues
PCR
Clinical samples, putrefied
samples, fresh tissues/blood
Tonsils for FAD
investigation
Serological
ELISA
Immunoblotting
Indirect fluorescent antibody
(IFA)
Smears, cryostat, buffy coat
Endemic regions
Diagnosis
No treatment available
No treatment should be attempted
No vaccine available
Depopulation
Restrictions on pig movements
Prevention & Control
Prevent direct transmission between infected and susceptible
Isolate ill pigs.
Prevent contact with feral or wild hogs; when possible
house pigs indoors.
Keep newly acquired pigs separate from the herd for at
least 30 days to assure health.
Do not feed uncooked pork products to pigs
Swill, garbage, waste
Disinfection
Vehicles, equipment, footwear, clothing
Appropriate disposal of manure and carcasses
Avoid hunting wild hogs prior to contact with
domestic pigs.
Control tick and other insect vectors
May be difficult in endemic areas
Quarantine of farm, Authorities notified
Movement restrictions
Eradication
Euthanize/depopulation of infected and in-contact animals

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African swine fever

  • 1. Faculty of Veterinary Medicine & Animal Husbandry Somali National University Mogadishu, Gaheyr Campus Oct. 26. 2019 INFECTIOUS DISEASES II (Viral Diseases) AFRICAN SWINE FEVER (ASF)
  • 2. History 1921: Discovered in Kenya Today: endemic in most of sub-Saharan Africa including the island of Madagascar
  • 3. 1957: First occurrence outside Africa - Portugal 1960s: Portugal and Spain 1970-1980s: Spread to Europe The Netherlands, Italy, France, Belgium 1990s: Disease eradicated Remains endemic on the Island of Sardinia
  • 4. Tick Vector 1963: Virus isolated from soft tick Ornithodoros erraticus 1971: Western Hemisphere Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Brazil Eradicated
  • 5. 2007: Republic of Georgia Spread in Caucasus Region (Eurasia), including Russia Federation 2015: Eastern Europe Lithuania, Latvia, Poland, Romania Wild boar in Iran
  • 6. Outbreaks China: 2018 first time reported, domestic pigs Belgium: Wild boars Hungary, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Russia, Poland, Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania
  • 7. Uncooked/undercooked pork products fed to pigs (imported, illegal) Portugal , Spain (1960); Italy (1983); Belgium (1985); Russia (2008); Romania, China (2018) Raw pork waste/garbage at airport or shipping ports Lisbon (1957), Malta, Sardinia (1978), Georgia (2007) Movement of infected wild boars Russia (2008)
  • 8. African swine fever is an important viral disease of pigs that has become a serious threat to worldwide pork production since 2007. African swine fever virus (ASFV) usually circulates in sub-Saharan Africa, where it is thought to have originated in wild warthogs but has become a common virus in domesticated pigs.
  • 9. ASF viruses range from highly pathogenic strains that may kill nearly the entire herd to less virulent isolates that cause a milder, nonspecific illness difficult to recognize as African swine fever.
  • 10. Etiology African swine fever results from infection by African swine fever virus (ASFV), an enveloped virus in the genus Asfivirus and family Asfarviridae.
  • 11. More than 20 genotypes of ASFV have been identified, many from wildlife cycles in Africa. Some of these viruses also occur in domesticated pigs.
  • 12. The virus introduced in 2007 into the Caucasus belongs to genotype II, while a virus that has been endemic in Sardinia (Italy) since the 1960s is of genotype I.
  • 13. Map: ASF Infection Distribution OIE: Jan-Sept 2018. Geographic Distribution
  • 14. Morbidity up to 100% Previously unexposed herds Mortality varies with genotype virulence Ranges from <5% to 100% All ages affected Subacute mortality = 30% to 70% May be asymptomatic in wild pigs
  • 15. Economic Impact Animal health High morbidity and mortality Highly contagious Import and export bans Movement restrictions Quarantine and depopulation Required for eradication 1971-Cuba: 400,000 pigs 2018-Romania: over 120,000 pigs Can become prolonged epidemic
  • 16. Species Affected Domestic pigs Feral swine Wild pigs Eurasian wild boars Warthogs (reservoir) Bush pigs (reservoir) Giant forest hogs European boar warthog bush pig Domestic pig
  • 17. Transmission Direct contact with infected pig Usually oronasal All secretions/excretions, blood, tissues Environmental contamination with products Ingestion of contaminated pork products Fed to pigs – swill, waste, garbage Carcasses
  • 18. Fomites Clothing, vehicles, equipment Environmental contamination Blood, diarrhea, feces Vectors Biological: Bite from soft ticks Ornithodoros Mechanical: Other insects Mosquitoes, biting flies (Stomoxys)
  • 19. Ornithodoros soft ticks Transstadial Transovarial Sexual transmission Infected for life Colonies maintain virus for years Tick-to-pig transmission Important in Africa Maintained between warthogs and tick
  • 20. Clinical Features Incubation period 5-21 days following direct contact < 5 days after tick bite Forms of disease Peracute – sudden death Acute Subacute Chronic
  • 21. Sudden deaths with few lesions (peracute cases) may be the first sign of an infection in some herds. Acute cases are characterized by a high fever, anorexia, lethargy, weakness and recumbency. Erythema can be seen, and is most apparent in white pigs.
  • 22. There may also be other hemorrhagic signs, including epistaxis and hemorrhages in the skin. Respiratory signs (including dyspnea), nasal and conjunctival discharges, and neurological signs have been reported.Pregnant animals frequently abort.
  • 23. Subacute African swine fever is similar, but with less severe clinical signs. Fever, thrombocytopenia and leukopenia may be transient; however, hemorrhages can occur during the period of thrombocytopenia. Abortions are sometimes the first sign of an outbreak in this form. Affected pigs usually die or recover within 3 to 4 weeks.
  • 24. Pigs with the chronic form have nonspecific signs such as an intermittent low fever, appetite loss and depression. Other signs may be limited to emaciation and stunting, but some pigs develop respiratory problems and swollen joints. Coughing is common, and diarrhea and occasional vomiting have been reported.
  • 25. Pig. There is bloody, mucoid, foamy nasal discharge.
  • 26. Pig, limbs. There is marked hyperemia of the distal limbs.
  • 27. Pig, perineal skin. There is a large sharply demarcated zone of hyperemia.
  • 28. Pig. There are multiple sharply demarcated foci of cutaneous hemorrhage and/or necrosis; hemorrhagic lesions may contain dark red (necrotic) centers
  • 29. Pig. There are multiple sharply demarcated foci of cutaneous hemorrhage and/or necrosis; hemorrhagic lesions may contain dark red (necrotic) centers.
  • 30. Pig, skin. Necrotic exudate is sloughing from the lesion on the left.
  • 31. Postmortem Lesions The gross lesions are highly variable, and are influenced by the virulence of the isolate and the course of the disease. Numerous organs may be affected, to varying extent, in animals with acute or subacute African swine fever. The carcass is often in good condition in animals that die acutely.
  • 32. Pig, kidney. There is moderate perirenal (retroperitoneal) edema.
  • 33. Pig, kidney. Petechiae are disseminated throughout the cortex, and there are larger coalescing pelvic hemorrhages.
  • 34. Pig, kidney. Close-up of cortical petechiae.
  • 35. Pig, kidney. There is severe disseminated cortical petechiation; the pale foci are infarcts.
  • 36. Pig, urinary bladder. There are disseminated mucosal petechiae.
  • 37. Pig, heart. There is abundant straw-colored pericardial fluid (hydropericardium), and multifocal epicardial hemorrhage.
  • 39. Pig, lung. The lung is noncollapsed and edematous; there is dorsal hemorrhage and ventral consolidation.
  • 40. Pig, stomach. There is "paintbrush" hemorrhage on the serosa.
  • 41. Pig, mandibular lymph node. There is moderate peripheral (medullary) hemorrhage
  • 42. Pig, stomach. The hepatogastric lymph node is markedly enlarged and hemorrhagic, and the adjacent lesser omentum is edematous
  • 43. Pig, stomach. The stomach is filled with clotted blood, and the wall is markedly edematous.
  • 44. Pig, spiral colon. The colon is distended with bloody contents (due to a hemorrhagic gastric ulcer).
  • 45. Pig, cecum. Mucosa is markedly edematous and hyperemic, and lymph nodes are hemorrhagic.
  • 46. Zoonotic potential There is no evidence that ASFV infects humans. There is no public health or food safety concern.
  • 47. Differential Diagnosis Classical swine fever (hog cholera) Porcine dermatitis and nephropathy syndrome Erysipelas Salmonellosis Eperythrozoonosis Actinobacillosis Glasser’s disease Aujeszky’s disease (pseudorabies) Thrombocytopenic purpura Warfarin poisoning Heavy metal toxicity
  • 48. Sampling Before collecting or sending any samples, the proper authorities should be contacted. Samples should only be sent under secure conditions and to authorized laboratories to prevent the spread of the disease Reportable disease. If ASF suspected, IMMEDIATELY notify animal health authorities
  • 49. Virus isolation Blood, tissues PCR Clinical samples, putrefied samples, fresh tissues/blood Tonsils for FAD investigation Serological ELISA Immunoblotting Indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) Smears, cryostat, buffy coat Endemic regions Diagnosis
  • 50. No treatment available No treatment should be attempted No vaccine available Depopulation Restrictions on pig movements
  • 51. Prevention & Control Prevent direct transmission between infected and susceptible Isolate ill pigs. Prevent contact with feral or wild hogs; when possible house pigs indoors. Keep newly acquired pigs separate from the herd for at least 30 days to assure health.
  • 52. Do not feed uncooked pork products to pigs Swill, garbage, waste Disinfection Vehicles, equipment, footwear, clothing Appropriate disposal of manure and carcasses Avoid hunting wild hogs prior to contact with domestic pigs. Control tick and other insect vectors May be difficult in endemic areas
  • 53. Quarantine of farm, Authorities notified Movement restrictions