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Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation Vol. 19 Issue 4, 368-375
Copyright © 2007 by the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians
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Full Scientific Reports

Association of myocarditis with high viral load of porcine circovirus type 2 in several tissues in cases of fetal death and high mortality in piglets. A case study

Inger M. Brunborg1, Christine M. Jonassen, Torfinn Moldal, Bjørn Bratberg, Bjørn Lium, Frank Koenen and Jürgen Schönheit

During a period of 1.5 months, a newly established pig herd experienced a high number of mummifications and stillbirths, a high neonatal mortality rate, and many piglets with congenital tremors or hind leg ataxia. After clinical and histological investigations, the submitted animals were divided into 4 groups: mummified or stillborn (N = 6), live born with myocarditis (N = 5) (average age 22.8 days), live born without myocarditis (N = 14) (average age 20.0 days), and control animals from a different herd (N = 5) (newborn). Statistically significant differences were observed in the mean porcine circovirus 2 (PCV2) load among the 4 groups in the liver (P < 0.0001). The presence of PCV2 antigen within the myocardial lesions was confirmed by immunohistochemistry. A high load of PCV2 DNA was observed in myocardium, liver, and spleen from mummified or stillborn piglets (>1 x 107 copies per 500 ng DNA), lower in piglets with myocarditis (>1 x 105 copies per 500 ng DNA), and even further lower in pigs without myocarditis (<1 x 105 copies per 500 ng DNA), whereas no PCV2 DNA was detected in the control animals. Myocardium, liver, and spleen were well suited for routine testing of fetuses and young piglets by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. Neither porcine parvovirus nor encepaholomyocarditis virus was detected. These results indicate that the PCV2 infection might have been of etiological importance for the fetal deaths and piglet mortality observed in this herd.

Key Words: Congenital tremor • mummification • myocarditis • PCV2 • quantification • stillbirth







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