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Vaccination
Management
Disease Information
A PMWS update (Jake Waddilove)
ABOUT PMWS & PDNS
National Pork Board PMWS Fact Sheet
About PDNS (Jake Waddilive)
CEI Emerging Disease Notices: PMWS / PDNS
Conference and meetings archive
Case Histories
Yorkshire Farm, UK - Mike Muirhead - Final Update, June 2002
Mike Muirhead's case history of a Yorkshire farm with PMWS and PDNS.
 
East Anglia Farm, UK - Philip Richardson
This paper charts the course and effects of the disease on a single herd as well as highlighting the economic impact.
Photographs
Clinical signs
Photos of the clinical signs that are seen generally in pigs with PMWS and PDNS. Includes skin lesions, enlarged lymph glands, wasting and dead pigs.
 
Post mortem (1)
Photos of the signs that are seen in post-mortem samples of pigs with PMWS and PDNS. Includes interstitial pneumonia, secondary bacterial infection, enlarged lymph nodes, oedema and intra cytoplasmic inclusions
 
Post mortem (2)
More Photos of the signs that are seen in post-mortem samples of pigs with PMWS and PDNS.


PMWS Research Archives

Published Thursday, July 01, 2004: Vet Journal. 168(1):41-9.(Abstract)
Postweaning multisystemic wasting syndrome: a review of aetiology, diagnosis and pathology.
Chae C. - Department of Veterinary Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine and School of Agricultural Biotechnology, Seoul National University, San 56-1, Shillim-dong, Kwanak-Gu 151-742, Seoul, South Korea.
This review paper concentrates on the aetiology, diagnosis, and pathological aspects of postweaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS). PMWS was first recognized in Canada in 1996 as a new emerging disease which caused wasting in postweaned pigs. Since then, PMWS has been recognized in pigs in many countries. The syndrome is caused by a DNA virus referred to as porcine circovirus 2 (PCV2), which is classified in the family Circoviridae. PMWS primarily occurs in pigs between 25 and 120 days of age with the highest number of cases occurring between 60 and 80 days of age. The diagnosis of PMWS must meet three criteria: (i) the presence of compatible clinical signs, (ii) the presence of characteristic microscopic lesions, and (iii) the presence of PCV2 within these lesions. In order to establish the diagnosis, techniques are required that link virus and tissue lesions, such as immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization, but not polymerase chain reaction or virus isolation. The three criteria considered separately are not diagnostic of PMWS. For example, the detection of PCV2 alone does not indicate PMWS but merely PCV2 infection. A hallmark of microscopic lesions of PMWS is granulomatous inflammation in the lymph nodes, liver, spleen, tonsil, thymus, and Peyer's patches. Large, multiple, basophilic or amphophilic grape-like intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies are often seen in the cytoplasm of macrophages and multinucleated giant cells.


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