Dekker A, Moonen P, Pol J M A
Central Institute for Animal Disease Control, CIDC-Lelystad, PO Box 2004, 8203 AA Lelystad, The Netherlands.
Vet Rec. 2005 Apr 30;156(18):572-5. doi: 10.1136/vr.156.18.572.
During the epidemic of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in The Netherlands in 2001, a sheep farm was identified that had been subclinically infected with the disease. The FMD virus genome was detected in 12 of 16 probang samples collected from the sheep and the virus was isolated from four of these samples. Linear defects were observed, 1 to 3 cm from the coronary band, in the hooves of several of the sheep. The defects were thought to have been caused by the FMD infection. It was thought that the distance of the defects from the coronary band might be an indication of the time since the animals had been infected. To determine the growth rate of the claws of sheep, the growth of the hoof horn of uninfected lambs and ewes was measured; in the lambs the growth rate was 0.44 mm per day and in the ewes it was 0.29 mm per day.
在2001年荷兰口蹄疫疫情期间,发现一个绵羊养殖场曾受到该病的亚临床感染。从这些绵羊采集的16份咽拭子样本中,有12份检测到口蹄疫病毒基因组,且从其中4份样本中分离出了病毒。在几只绵羊的蹄子上,距冠状带1至3厘米处观察到线性缺损。这些缺损被认为是由口蹄疫感染所致。缺损距冠状带的距离可能表明动物被感染后的时间。为了确定绵羊蹄爪的生长速度,测量了未感染羔羊和母羊蹄角质的生长情况;羔羊的生长速度为每天0.44毫米,母羊为每天0.29毫米。