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PMWS & PCVD


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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 Saturday, December 01, 2007: Veterinary Quarterly - Volume 29 (2007), Issue 4
Postweaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS) in Sweden from an exotic to an endemic disease.
Wallgren P, Belák K, Ehlorsson CJ, Bergström G, Lindberg M, Fossum C, Allan GM, Robertsson JA.
Postweaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS) is causally associated with porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2) infection of pigs. PCV2 was first demonstrated in Swedish pigs in 1993, although the virus was almost certainly present in pigs in the country before that. Despite this, no signs of PMWS were observed in pigs of Sweden until the first outbreak was reported in 2003.

The accumulated number of PMWS-affected herds have increased via 16 (2004) and 41 (2005) to 123 in December 2006. Of these herds, 30 (25%) have now been declared free from PMWS. However, a number of other herds have had individual pigs that have fulfilled the demands for PMWS at necropsy and 52 of these herds have been declared negative on herd basis after treatment for intestinal or respiratory diseases, and/or by correcting shortcomings in management of the herd including feed. Thus, individual cases of the disease have been observed in around 200 herds by the end of 2006 and PMWS is now regarded as an endemic disease in Sweden.

The pig population of Sweden is geographically isolated, the density of pigs and the pathogen load in the country is low and the use of growth promoters (low dose antibiotics in feed) was prohibited in 1986. Additionally, the trade of animals in Sweden is organised in a restricted way. Because of these factors it is possible to conduct meaningful real-time studies on the transformation of PMWS in Sweden from being an exotic to an endemic disease in a three year time scale. Initially the PMWS cases were concentrated in the southern part of Sweden, but have gradually spread north. The PMWS-positive herds have, in general, had an effective production, but some management errors have constantly been observed in affected herds.

Physical links between affected herds are often missing, and the data generated to date on the PMWS outbreaks in Sweden do not suggest an introduction of a new contagious microbe into the country that is responsible for the PMWS outbreaks, nor does PMWS appear to be spread via semen. In Sweden, intensity in rearing, disease preventing measures and immaturity of the piglets appear to be important as predisposing factors to PMWS and, as such, are discussed in this article.


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