Veterinary Epidemiology & Public Health Group, Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, Royal Veterinary College, London, UK.
BMC Vet Res. 2011 Dec 30;7:82. doi: 10.1186/1746-6148-7-82.
Respiratory diseases account for significant economic losses to the UK pig industry. Lesions indicative of respiratory disease in pig lungs at slaughter e.g. pneumonia and pleuritis are frequently recorded to assess herd health or provide data for epidemiological studies. The BPEX Pig Health Scheme (BPHS) is a monitoring system, which informs producers of gross lesions in their pigs' carcasses at slaughter, enabling farm-level decisions to be made. The aim of the study was to assess whether information provided by the BPHS regarding respiratory lesions was associated with respiratory pathogens in the farm, farm management practices and each other.
BPHS reports were obtained from a subset of 70 pig farms involved in a cross-sectional study conducted in 2008-09 investigating the epidemiology of post-weaning multi-systemic wasting syndrome. The reports were combined with data regarding the presence/absence of several pathogens in the herd and potential farm-level risk factors for respiratory disease. Principal component analysis (PCA) performed on BPHS reports generated three principal components, explaining 71% of the total variance. Enzootic pneumonia score, severe pleurisy and acute pleuropneumonia had the highest loadings for the principal component which explained the largest percentage of the total variance (35%) (BPHS component 1), it was thought that this component identifies farms with acute disease. Using the factor loadings a score for each farm for BPHS component 1 was obtained. As farms' score for BPHS component 1 increased, average carcass weight at slaughter decreased. In addition, farms positive for H1N2 and porcine reproductive and respiratory disease virus (PRRSV) were more likely to have higher levels of severe and mild pleurisy reported by the BPHS, respectively.
The study found statistical associations between levels of pleurisy recorded by BPHS at slaughter and the presence H1N2 and PRRSV in the herd. There is also some evidence that farms which submit pigs with these lesions may have reduced productivity. However, more research is needed to fully validate the scheme.
呼吸疾病给英国养猪业造成了巨大的经济损失。屠宰时肺部出现的病变,如肺炎和胸膜炎等,常被用来评估畜群健康或为流行病学研究提供数据。BPEX 猪健康计划(BPHS)是一个监测系统,可告知生产者其屠宰猪只胴体的大体病变,从而做出农场层面的决策。本研究旨在评估 BPHS 报告中关于呼吸病变的信息是否与农场中的呼吸病原体、农场管理实践以及彼此之间有关。
从参与 2008-09 年横断面研究的 70 个猪场中抽取了一个子集,获得了 BPHS 报告,该研究旨在调查断奶后多系统消耗综合征的流行病学。将报告与畜群中存在/不存在几种病原体以及潜在的农场层面呼吸疾病风险因素的数据相结合。对 BPHS 报告进行主成分分析(PCA),生成了三个主成分,解释了总方差的 71%。地方性肺炎评分、严重胸膜炎和急性胸膜炎在解释总方差最大百分比(35%)的主成分中具有最高的负荷(BPHS 成分 1),据认为该成分可识别急性疾病的农场。使用因子负荷,为每个农场获得了 BPHS 成分 1 的得分。随着农场 BPHS 成分 1 的得分增加,屠宰时的平均胴体重下降。此外,BPHS 报告的严重和轻度胸膜炎水平较高的猪场,更有可能检测到 H1N2 和猪繁殖与呼吸综合征病毒(PRRSV)阳性。
本研究发现屠宰时 BPHS 记录的胸膜炎水平与畜群中 H1N2 和 PRRSV 的存在之间存在统计学关联。还有一些证据表明,提交有这些病变的猪只的农场可能生产力降低。但是,需要进一步研究来充分验证该方案。