AI Article Synopsis

  • Investigating porcine abortion and stillborn piglet samples using pooled organ tissue (thymus and heart) highlighted challenges for diagnostic labs.
  • Quantitative PCR techniques detected PRRSV-1 in all 13 pooled samples, and PCV2 in 11 of 15, suggesting valuable insights into viral infections in swine.
  • The study advocates for using pluck-pools for more efficient diagnosis, but further research is needed to establish clinical interpretation guidelines for viral loads.

Article Abstract

Investigating infectious agents in porcine abortion material and stillborn piglets poses challenges for practitioners and diagnostic laboratories. In this study, pooled samples of individual reference organs (thymus and heart) from a total of 1000 aborted fetuses and stillborn piglets were investigated using quantitative PCR protocols for porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus 1 (PRRSV-1) and porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2). Simultaneously, a pluck-pool containing equivalent portions of fetal thymus, heart, and lung tissue was collected, frozen at - 20 °C, and re-analyzed when a certain amount of either PRRSV-1 RNA or PCV2 DNA was detected in individual reference organs. Thirteen pluck-pools were assessed for PRRSV-1, all being PCR-positive. For PCV2, 11 of 15 pluck-pools investigated were PCR-positive. In all pluck-pools testing negative, viral loads in individual pools were low. This study indicates that pluck-pools can be valuable diagnostic material and the consolidation of multiple organs through a single RNA/DNA extraction optimizes the utilization of available laboratory resources. Additional research is required to assess the feasibility of follow-up investigations and to accurately define criteria for interpretation of viral loads in a clinical context.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tvjl.2024.106081DOI Listing

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