Literature DB >> 9880933

Epidemiology of bovine ephemeral fever virus infection in Taiwan.

Y K Liao1, Y Inaba, N J Li, C Y Chain, S L Lee, P P Liou.   

Abstract

Sick animals with excessive nasal discharges and protruding tongue as a result of dyspnea were observed in the August of 1996. Eight strains of BEF virus were isolated from heparinized blood samples of the affected cattle. Most of the affected cattle were difficult to be treated and had a poor prognosis. A total of 516 farms in the 9 districts of Taiwan were affected in 1996. Among a population of 110,247 dairy cattle, 14,993 (13.6%) cattle were found to be clinically ill. During the epidemic, 1,685 (11.3%) affected cattle were culled or dead after the onset of the disease. Furthermore, a strain of Ibaraki virus was isolated from the blood sample of a sick cattle that showed pyrexia, labored respiration and solitary behavior in the affected farm. The cattle with Ibaraki virus infection had typical symptoms of BEF at the early stage of the disease, but neither stomatitis nor pharyngoesophageal paralysis was observed at the onset of the disease. The outbreak was presumably brought about by the low level or non-immune status of a large cattle population due to the negligence of BEF vaccination. Therefore, the disease easily recurred in Taiwan after a typhoon episode in the August of 1996, which resulted in the proliferation of biting midges in the field. No difference in the antigenicty was found between the new and the previous isolates of BEF virus. As analyzed by cross neutralization test, the isolated BEF viruses showed no relationship to the Kimberley and Berrimah viruses that were isolated from the blood of cattle and related to BEF virus in Australia. We have tried to advise farmers that they must vaccinate their cattle annually to prevent BEF outbreak in the future.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9880933     DOI: 10.1016/S0944-5013(98)80014-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microbiol Res        ISSN: 0944-5013            Impact factor:   5.415


  9 in total

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Journal:  Trop Anim Health Prod       Date:  2016-02-22       Impact factor: 1.559

2.  Seroprevalence investigation of bovine ephemeral fever in yaks in Tibetan Plateau of China from 2012 to 2015.

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3.  Apoptosis induction in BEFV-infected Vero and MDBK cells through Src-dependent JNK activation regulates caspase-3 and mitochondria pathways.

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4.  Risk analysis and seroprevalence of bovine ephemeral fever virus in cattle in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

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5.  A large-scale outbreak of bovine ephemeral fever in Turkey, 2012.

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Review 6.  Epidemiology and control of bovine ephemeral fever.

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7.  Occurrence of bovine ephemeral fever in Okinawa Prefecture, Japan, in 2012 and development of a reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction assay to detect bovine ephemeral fever virus gene.

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8.  Monitoring for bovine arboviruses in the most southwestern islands in Japan between 1994 and 2014.

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9.  Epidemiological analysis of bovine ephemeral fever in 2012-2013 in the subtropical islands of Japan.

Authors:  Yoko Hayama; Sachiko Moriguchi; Tohru Yanase; Moemi Suzuki; Tsuyoshi Niwa; Kazufumi Ikemiyagi; Yoshiki Nitta; Takehisa Yamamoto; Sota Kobayashi; Kiyokazu Murai; Toshiyuki Tsutsui
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  9 in total

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