Literature DB >> 18554497

Modelling Salmonella spread within a farrow-to-finish pig herd.

Amandine Lurette1, Catherine Belloc, Suzanne Touzeau, Thierry Hoch, Pauline Ezanno, Henri Seegers, Christine Fourichon.   

Abstract

Delivery of infected pigs to the slaughterhouse is a major source of pork meat contamination by bacterial hazards to humans. We propose a model of Salmonella spread within a farrow-to-finish pig herd, assuming the prevalence in infected delivered pigs depends on the whole pig life-time and growing process. This stochastic discrete-time model represents both the population dynamics in a farrow-to-finish pig herd using batch management, and Salmonella spread. Four mutually exclusive individual health states were considered: Salmonella-free, seronegative shedder, seropositive shedder and seropositive not shedding carrier, making the distinction between seropositive animals and shedders. Since indirect transmission is the main route of transmission, the probability of infection depends on the quantity of Salmonella in the pigs' environment (Q). A dose effect function is used with two thresholds, assuming saturation in exposure for high Q vs. a minimum exposure for low Q. Salmonella is introduced in an initially Salmonella-free 150-sow herd. Prevalence of shedders and seroprevalence are calculated over time in batches of sows and pigs, and in groups of delivered pigs, composed of pigs from different batches. The model shows very variable seroprevalence over time within a herd among delivered groups, as well as among replications. The mean seroprevalence and the mean shedding prevalence are 19.3% and 13.8% respectively. A sensitivity analysis shows that the Salmonella quantity shed and the maternal protective factor are the most influential parameters on Salmonella prevalence in delivered pigs.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18554497     DOI: 10.1051/vetres:2008026

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vet Res        ISSN: 0928-4249            Impact factor:   3.683


  8 in total

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6.  Understanding the role of cleaning in the control of Salmonella Typhimurium in grower-finisher pigs: a modelling approach.

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8.  Mathematical modeling of influenza A virus dynamics within swine farms and the effects of vaccination.

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  8 in total

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