Quantification of within- and between-pen transmission of Fouth-and-Mouth disease virus in pigs

P.L. Eble, A.A. de Koeijer, A. Bouma, J.A. Stegeman, A. Dekker

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

59 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Quantified transmission parameters of Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus (FMDV) are needed for epidemic models used for control and surveillance. In this study, we quantified the within- and between-pen transmission of FMDV in groups of pigs by estimating the daily transmission rate , i.e. the number of secondary infections caused by one infectious pig during one day, using an SIR (susceptible-infectious-removed) model. Within-pen transmission was studied in four groups of ten pigs in which 5 infected and 5 susceptible pigs had direct contact; between-pen transmission was studied in one group of ten pigs in which 5 infected and 5 susceptible pigs had indirect contact. Daily results of virus isolation of oropharyngeal fluid were used to quantify the transmission rate , using Generalised Linear Modelling (GLM) and a maximum likelihood method. In addition, we estimated the expected time to infection of the first pig within a pen Tw and in the indirect-contact pen Tb. The between-pen transmission rate b was estimated to be 0.59 (0.083-4.18) per day, which was significantly lower than the within-pen transmission rate w of 6.14 (3.75-10.06). Tw was 1.6 h, and Tb was 16 h. Our results show that the transmission rate is influenced by contact structure between pigs.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)647-654
JournalVeterinary Research
Volume37
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2006

Keywords

  • swine-fever virus
  • experimental-infection
  • antibody-response
  • great-britain
  • vaccination
  • epidemic
  • impact
  • calves

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