A descriptive study of the frequency and characteristics of proliferative enteropathy in swine in Ontario by analyzing routine animal health surveillance data
Jb. Wilson et al., A descriptive study of the frequency and characteristics of proliferative enteropathy in swine in Ontario by analyzing routine animal health surveillance data, CAN VET J, 40(10), 1999, pp. 713-717
Citations number
11
Categorie Soggetti
Veterinary Medicine/Animal Health
Journal title
CANADIAN VETERINARY JOURNAL-REVUE VETERINAIRE CANADIENNE
Routine surveillance data, collected on pathology submissions at the Animal
Health Laboratory in Guelph between 1992 and 1997, were analyzed to determ
ine demographic, clinical, and pathologic characteristics of cases of proli
ferative enteropathy and the frequency of this condition relative to other
infectious enteric diseases in swine in Ontario. The most commonly reported
disease was Escherichia coli enteritis (average cases/year = 70.0). Among
infectious enteropathies that occur typically in neonatal pigs, coccidiosis
(28.4 cases/year) and rotaviral enteritis (5.6 cases/year) were reported.
Among infectious enteropathies generally associated with diarrhea in weaner
and grower/finisher pigs, the most frequently reported was proliferative e
nteropathy (27.6 cases/year), followed by swine dysentery (23.3 cases/year)
, transmissible gastroenteritis (19.6 cases/year), and salmonellosis (8.4 c
ases/year). Diarrhea and bloody diarrhea were reported in 29% and 31%, resp
ectively, of herds diagnosed with proliferative enteropathy. Important gros
s intestinal lesions included mucosal hypertrophy (62% of cases), hemorrhag
e (47%)? and mucosal necrosis (34%). Histologic intestinal lesions included
epithelial hyperplasia (90% of cases), mucosal necrosis (59%), and inflamm
ation (49%). Our results suggest that proliferative enteropathy is a major
infectious enteric disease in grower/finisher pigs in Ontario.