Abstract

In a group of 22 healthy pigs aged between 4 and 6 months, 2 pigs became ill with high fever, complete anorexia, cough and abnormal swaying movements on 22 June 2015. One of them died on June 24 and the second died on July 3. Shortly after, the remaining pigs also fell ill and died from the same illness by 10 August 2015. We investigated the aetiology, epidemiological and clinical features of the outbreak. We recorded the clinical signs and symptoms for each pig with the date of onset of illness. Veterinarians conducted post‐mortem examinations on the 12 dead pigs, they collected tissue samples from the dead pigs and placed them in a tube containing 1 mL of nucleic acid extraction buffer (lysis buffer). We tested all the tissue samples by real‐time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (rRT‐PCR) to detect classical swine fever virus (CSFV) because the animals’ symptoms matched those of this disease. We also conducted a phylogentic analysis of the nucleotide sequence of the E2 gene segment of CSFV detected in a lung tissue sample. The attack rate (22/22) and the case fatality were 100%. The predominant symptoms of the disease included high fever, cough, diarrhoea and swaying movements of the hind legs prior to death. Of the 12 pigs tissue samples tested, all had evidence of the presence of CSFV RNA by rRT‐PCR. The phylogenetic analysis indicated that the virus belongs to genotype 2.2, which is closely related to CSFV genotype 2.2 reported in India. Our investigation suggests that CSF is circulating in pigs, posing a risk for communities in Bangladesh that rely on pigs for economic income and dietary protein. Future research could focus on estimating the disease and economic burden of CSFV in pig rearing areas to determine if interventions might be warranted or cost‐effective.

Highlights

  • Classical swine fever virus (CSFV), a member of the Pestivirus genus within the Flaviviridae family (Meyers et al 1989), is a highly contagious and often fatal infection in pigs which contributes to economic loss in pig farming (Edwards et al 2000; Moennig et al 2003; Postel et al 2012) by constraining pig production and diminishing international trade in regions with CSFV-infected pigs and pig products (Boender et al 2008; Sarma et al 2008)

  • All 12 pig tissues samples tested positive for CSFV RNA by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR)

  • The clinical, necropsy and molecular findings suggested that the pigs had the CSFV infection

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Summary

Introduction

Classical swine fever virus (CSFV), a member of the Pestivirus genus within the Flaviviridae family (Meyers et al 1989), is a highly contagious and often fatal infection in pigs which contributes to economic loss in pig farming (Edwards et al 2000; Moennig et al 2003; Postel et al 2012) by constraining pig production and diminishing international trade in regions with CSFV-infected pigs and pig products (Boender et al 2008; Sarma et al 2008). India has CSF prevention and control measures in place including available locally produced CSF vaccines (Bett et al 2012), Bhutan has CSF vaccination programs for government breeding farms only (Monger 2015) and Nepal has planned to implement the. Percentage and mean for the variables related to pig demographic characteristics and clinical manifestation

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