ThePigSite Quick Disease Guide
Hps - (Haemophilus Parasuis)
In the majority of herds in which the bacterium is endemic, sows produce a strong maternal immunity which normally persists in their offspring until 8 to 12 weeks of age. As a result, the effects of the infection in weaners are usually nil or minimal. . Disease may however be seen in sucking pigs. Pigs usually become sub-clinically infected when still protected by maternal antibody and then stimulate their own immune response. If however the maternal immunity wears off before they become infected they may develop severe disease. This is usually sometime after weaning. It can also act as a secondary pathogen to other major diseases particularly enzootic pneumonia (EP) (Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae). Outbreaks of disease are sometimes experienced in sucking pigs, particularly in gilt herds.
Hps attacks the smooth surfaces of the joints, coverings of the intestine, lungs, heart and brain causing pneumonia, heart sac infection, peritonitis and pleurisy. It is respiratory spread.
Symptoms
Sows- Disease is rare in sows, unless the dry sow is naive.
- Lameness / stiffness.
- Slight swellings over the joints and tendons.
- Meningitis rarely.
Acute disease:
- Rapidly depressed.
- Elevated temperature.
- Inappetence .
- Reluctant to rise.
- Characteristic feature a short cough of 2-3 episodes.
- Sudden death in good sucking piglets is not uncommon.
- Also causes individual cases of arthritis and lameness with fever and inappetence.
- Pale and poor growing pigs.
- Sudden deaths may occur.
- Pigs with gl?ssers disease become rapidly depressed or may be just found dead.
- Elevated temperature.
- Stop eating.
- Reluctant to rise.
- Fever.
- Nervous signs - fits and convulsions including meningitis.
- Poor pigs, wasting, hairy often result.
- Fever.
- Mild meningitis.
- Arthritis.
- Lameness.
- Pneumonia.
- Heart sac infection.
- Peritonitis and pleurisy.
- A characteristic feature is a short cough of only 2-3 episodes.
Causes
- It is respiratory spread. Disease may be precipitated by PRRS, flu or EP.
- Poor environments, draughts etc. predispose.
- Stress.








