Updated: 22/04/2002

CLASSICAL SWINE FEVER (hog cholera)

 Aetiology  Epidemiology  Diagnosis  Prevention and control  References 

AETIOLOGY

Classification of the causative agent

Virus Family Flaviviridae, genus Pestivirus

Resistance to physical and chemical action

Temperature: Partially resistant to moderate heat (56°C)
pH: Inactivated by pH <3.0 or pH >11.0
Chemicals: Susceptible to ether, chloroform, ß-propiolactone 0.4%
Disinfectants: Inactivated by cresol, sodium hydroxide (2%), formalin (1%), sodium carbonate (4% anhydrous or 10% crystalline, with 0.1% detergent), ionic and non-ionic detergents, strong iodophors (1%) in phosphoric acid
Survival: Survives well in cold conditions and can survive some forms of meat processing (curing and smoking)


EPIDEMIOLOGY

Hosts

Pigs and wild boar are the only natural reservoir of classical swine fever virus

Transmission

Sources of virus

Occurrence

The disease occurs in much of Asia, Central and South America, and parts of Europe and Africa. Many countries are free of the disease

For detailed information on occurrence, see recent issues of World Animal Health and the OIE Bulletin

DIAGNOSIS

Incubation period is 2-14 days

Clinical diagnosis

Acute form

Chronic form

Congenital form

Mild form (sows)

Lesions

Acute form

Chronic form

Congenital form

Differential diagnosis

Laboratory diagnosis

Procedures

For details, refer to the OIE Manual

Identification of the agent

Serological tests

  • Neutralisation peroxidase-linked assay
  • Fluorescent antibody virus neutralisation
  • ELISA
(prescribed tests in the Manual)

Samples

Identification of the agent

  • Tonsil
  • Lymph nodes (pharyngeal, mesenteric)
  • Spleen
  • Kidney
  • Distal ileum
  • Blood in EDTA (live cases)
kept under refrigeration and shipped to laboratory as quickly as possible

Serological tests


PREVENTION AND CONTROL

No treatment is possible. Affected pigs must be slaughtered and the carcases buried or incinerated

Sanitary prophylaxis

Medical prophylaxis

Vaccination with modified live virus strains is effective in preventing losses in countries where classical swine fever is enzootic, but is unlikely, on its own, to eliminate infection entirely. In countries which are free of disease, or where eradication is in progress, vaccination is normally prohibited

Response to outbreaks

REFERENCES AND OTHER INFORMATION

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