OBJECTIVE: To determine whether porcine dermatitis and nephropathy syndrome (PDNS) could be experimentally induced in gnotobiotic swine. SAMPLE POPULATION: Plasma samples from 27 sows and 20 conventional weaned piglets were obtained, and 30 gnotobiotic pigs were used in experiments. PROCEDURES: 3 experiments were conducted. Groups of 3-day-old gnotobiotic pigs were inoculated with pooled plasma samples obtained from healthy feeder pigs in a herd that was in the initial phases of an outbreak of respiratory disease; gross and histologic lesions of PDNS were detected in the inoculated pigs. In a second experiment, 2- and 3-day-old gnotobiotic pigs were inoculated with porcine reproductive respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV) and with PRRSV-negative tissue homogenate containing genogroup 1 torque teno virus (g1-TTV). Lesions of PDNS were detected. RESULTS: Pigs inoculated with pooled plasma or the combination of tissue-culture-origin PRRSV and g1-TTV tissue homogenate developed systemic hemostatic defects, bilaterally symmetric cutaneous hemorrhages, generalized edema, icterus, bilaterally symmetric renal cortical hemorrhage, dermal vasculitis with hemorrhage, and interstitial pneumonia consistent with a clinical and pathologic diagnosis of PDNS. The PRRSV RNAs and g1-TTV DNAs were detected in plasma; all pigs seroconverted to PRRSV, and all had negative results for porcine circovirus type 2 when tested by use of PCR assays. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: These data suggested that PDNS is a manifestation of disseminated intravascular coagulation in swine. For the experimental conditions reported here, combined infection with g1-TTV and PRRSV was implicated in the genesis of these lesions.
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether porcinedermatitis and nephropathy syndrome (PDNS) could be experimentally induced in gnotobiotic swine. SAMPLE POPULATION: Plasma samples from 27 sows and 20 conventional weaned piglets were obtained, and 30 gnotobiotic pigs were used in experiments. PROCEDURES: 3 experiments were conducted. Groups of 3-day-old gnotobiotic pigs were inoculated with pooled plasma samples obtained from healthy feeder pigs in a herd that was in the initial phases of an outbreak of respiratory disease; gross and histologic lesions of PDNS were detected in the inoculated pigs. In a second experiment, 2- and 3-day-old gnotobiotic pigs were inoculated with porcine reproductive respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV) and with PRRSV-negative tissue homogenate containing genogroup 1 torque teno virus (g1-TTV). Lesions of PDNS were detected. RESULTS:Pigs inoculated with pooled plasma or the combination of tissue-culture-origin PRRSV and g1-TTV tissue homogenate developed systemic hemostatic defects, bilaterally symmetric cutaneous hemorrhages, generalized edema, icterus, bilaterally symmetric renal cortical hemorrhage, dermal vasculitis with hemorrhage, and interstitial pneumonia consistent with a clinical and pathologic diagnosis of PDNS. The PRRSV RNAs and g1-TTV DNAs were detected in plasma; all pigs seroconverted to PRRSV, and all had negative results for porcine circovirus type 2 when tested by use of PCR assays. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: These data suggested that PDNS is a manifestation of disseminated intravascular coagulation in swine. For the experimental conditions reported here, combined infection with g1-TTV and PRRSV was implicated in the genesis of these lesions.
Authors: Ada G Cino-Ozuna; Steven Henry; Richard Hesse; Jerome C Nietfeld; Jianfa Bai; H Morgan Scott; Raymond R R Rowland Journal: J Clin Microbiol Date: 2011-02-23 Impact factor: 5.948
Authors: Alessandra Marnie Martins Gomes de Castro; Cintia Maria Favero; Cintia Manzatto Baldin; Mauro Borba; Fernando Gomes de Castro; Simone Miyashiro; José Carlos de Moura; Ricardo Augusto Dias; Ricardo Arruda Dias; Paulo Eduardo Brandão; Leonardo José Richtzenhain Journal: Can J Vet Res Date: 2012-07 Impact factor: 1.310
Authors: Alejandro Vargas-Ruiz; Hugo Ramírez-Álvarez; José I Sánchez-Betancourt; Víctor Quintero-Ramírez; Ignacio C Rangel-Rodríguez; Joel A Vázquez-Perez; Lucia A García-Camacho Journal: Can J Vet Res Date: 2017-07 Impact factor: 1.310