AI Article Synopsis

  • Porcine epidemic diarrhea (PED) is a serious viral disease affecting pigs, leading to significant economic losses globally, with vaccination being the most effective control method available.
  • An analysis of 240 PED outbreak cases from various farms found that herd movement and delays in piglet production were major factors for PED spread, with higher rates of transmission during warmer months.
  • Results indicated that using highly virulent live vaccines and commercial inactivated vaccines significantly reduced outbreak frequency and duration, leading to better financial outcomes for farms compared to other vaccination strategies.

Article Abstract

Background: Porcine epidemic diarrhea (PED) is a contagious intestinal disease caused by porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV) characterized by vomiting, diarrhea, anorexia, and dehydration, which has caused huge economic losses around the world. However, it is very hard to find completely valid approaches to control the transmission of PEDV. At present, vaccine immunity remains the most effective method. To better control the spread of PED and evaluate the validity of different immunization strategies, 240 PED outbreak cases from 577 swine breeding farms were collected and analyzed. The objective of the present study was to analyze the epidemic regularity of PEDV and evaluate two kinds of different immunization strategies for controlling PED.

Results: The results showed that the main reasons which led to the outbreak of PED were the movement of pig herds between different pig farms (41.7%) and delaying piglets from the normal production flow (15.8%). The prevalence of PEDV in the hot season (May to October) was obviously higher than that in the cold season (January to April, November to December). Results of different vaccine immunity cases showed that immunization with the highly virulent live vaccine (NH-TA2020 strain) and the commercial inactivated vaccine could significantly decrease the frequency of swine breeding farms (5.9%), the duration of PED epidemic (1.70 weeks), and the week batches of dead piglets (0.48 weeks weaned piglets), compared with immunization with commercial attenuated vaccines and inactivated vaccine of PED. Meanwhile, immunization with the highly virulent live vaccine and the commercial inactivated vaccine could bring us more cash flows of Y̶275,274 per year than immunization with commercial live attenuated vaccine and inactivated vaccine in one 3000 sow pig farm within one year.

Conclusion: Therefore, immunization with highly virulent live vaccine and inactivated vaccine of PED is more effective and economical in the prevention and control of PED in the large-scale swine farming system.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10401829PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40813-023-00331-zDOI Listing

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