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Porcine circovirus diseases

Porcine circovirus diseases have traditionally been defined as those associated with porcine circovirus 2 (PCV-2) infection. However, this terminology should be revised because the advent of the novel porcine circovirus 3 (PCV-3) may expand the clinicopathologic outcome caused by porcine circovirus infections. Porcine circovirus 1 (PCV-1) is still considered a nonpathogenic agent for swine. Historically, PCV-1 was described as a noncytopathogenic, picornavirus-like contaminant in the porcine kidney cell line PK-15 (ATCC-CCL33). This agent was later shown to be a small, nonenveloped virus containing a single-stranded, circular DNA genome; it was named porcine circovirus (PCV). PCV antibodies in swine were found to be widespread, and experimental infections with this virus in pigs did not result in clinical disease, suggesting that PCV was nonpathogenic. PCV-2 has been further associated with a number of disease syndromes in pigs, so the term porcine circovirus disease (PCVD) was proposed as a collective name. The terms PCV2-systemic disease (PCV2-SD) and PCV2-reproductive disease (PCV2-RD) have been proposed to replace PMWS and PCV2-associated reproductive failure, respectively. Moreover, it is currently thought that the most important PCVD is the PCV2-subclinical infection (PCV2-SI), which is linked with growth retardation without overt clinical signs. Porcine dermatitis and nephropathy syndrome (PDNS) is also included as a PCVD, although there is still no proof that PCV2 is the antigen linked with this immunocomplex disease. PCV-3 has been recently linked with reproductive disorders and multisystemic inflammation associated with vasculitis, as well as with PDNS. Like the other porcine circoviruses, PCV-3 is found worldwide.
Pig farmers are urging pork industry bosses to think twice before trying an expensive and unproven strategy to combat a disease threatening the New Zealand pig farming industry. The strategy to eliminate post-weaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS) would involve reducing all stock numbers, fumigating piggeries, and starting from scratch on affected piggeries, effectively costing each farmer a year's production. A representative for some of the 25 farmers affected by the syndrome suggested...
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The Senate's Rural Affairs Committee has written to the country's head of quarantine, urging him to reverse the decision to allow pig meat imports into Australia. The committee has been conducting an inquiry into Biosecurity Australia's decision to approve pig meat imports and was due to hand down its findings later this week. But yesterday the IRA appeals panel dismissed six objections to the decision, paving the way for a new quarantine policy. Committee chair Liberal Senator Bill Heffernan...
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Waikato pig farmers have voted to continue their fight to eradicate a destructive disease in young pigs, despite biosecurity official advising it is impossible. The first in a series of nationwide meetings to develop a strategy of eradication was held in Hamilton last night. Pork Industry Board chief executive Angus Davidson said it had voted two-to-one in favour of further work on eradicating post-weaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS). "Support is being offered to farmers. A farm...
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Biosecurity officials say 25 piggeries between Whangarei and Taranaki have been confirmed or provisionally confirmed as having a serious pig disease. More than half of the farms with post-weaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS) -- which kills young pigs -- are in the wider Waikato, where 20 per cent of the country's pig farms are based. Hundreds more farms around the country are being investigated. The disease was diagnosed at Ted and Irene Graham's piggery at Orini, 24km east of Huntly,...
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