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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 Monday, January 15, 2007: Virology - Volume 357, Issue 2 , 20 January 2007, Pages 175-185
Molecular evolution of porcine circovirus type 2 genomes: Phylogeny and clonality
A. Olvera, M. Cortey and J. Segalés
Porcine circoviruses (PCVs) type 1 (PCV1) and type 2 (PCV2) show high levels of nucleotide similarity, but PCV1 is considered non-pathogenic and PCV2 has been associated with several disease outcomes in pigs, mainly postweaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS). After exploring different topologies of the origin of PCVs, it was concluded that PCV1 and PCV2 seem to have a common origin. On the other hand, PCV2 could be divided into two groups (1 and 2) and eight clusters (1A to 1C and 2A to 2E), but none of those was apparently associated with disease status or geographic area. When phylogenetic trees constructed with the whole PCV2 genome, the cap or the rep genes were compared, some incongruence was identified. The possible existence of recombination was evaluated and cluster 1B was found to have a possible recombinant origin. Selective pressure was detected in all parts of the PCV2 genome, especially in the rep gene. Finally, the cap gene was the more suitable phylogenetic and epidemiological marker for PCV2, despite the fact that the virus can undergo recombination mainly within the first part of the rep region.


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