Abstract

BackgroundChronic pleurisy is a common finding in slaughtered pigs in post-mortem meat inspection. The prevalence of pleurisy has been increasing during the last decade also in Finland. The aim of this prospective case-control study was to search for environmental, infectious and management-related herd-level risk factors for pleurisy in the slaughterhouse. Altogether 46 Finnish pig herds, including 25 control (low pleurisy prevalence in meat inspection) and 21 case (high pleurisy) herds, were enrolled in the study and visited during the tenth week of the rearing period of finishing pigs. Herd personnel were asked about basic herd information, management and environmental factors. Selected pigs were examined clinically, environmental parameters were measured and 15 blood samples per herd were taken during herd visits. Antibodies against Actinobacillus pleuropneumonia serotype 2 (APP2) and ApxIV toxin and swine influenza virus were measured. After the slaughter of study pigs, meat inspection results of the batch were gathered from slaughterhouses. Multivariate logistic regression model was built to identify possible risk factors for a herd to be a case herd (i.e. having high pleurisy values).ResultsFinishing herd type and herd size were observed to act as risk factors. None of clinical signs of pigs, management-related factors or environmental measurements were associated with herd status.ConclusionsAs previously known, in endemic and subclinical infections such as APP, herd factors are important, but detailed risk factors seem to be difficult to identify.

Highlights

  • Chronic pleurisy is a common finding in slaughtered pigs in post-mortem meat inspection

  • We removed 18 of the tentative herds because they did not have the same pleurisy status in the batch inspected after the herd visit

  • all-in all-out production (AIAO) production correlated strongly with herd type, and because of this the variable was omitted from multivariate modelling

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic pleurisy is a common finding in slaughtered pigs in post-mortem meat inspection. The prevalence of pleurisy has been increasing during the last decade in Finland. The aim of this prospective casecontrol study was to search for environmental, infectious and management-related herd-level risk factors for pleurisy in the slaughterhouse. In Finland, pleurisy prevalence in slaughter pigs has clearly been increasing during the last decade [5]. In Finland, the prevalence of porcine (2020) 6:21 was reported to increase the odds of contracting chronic pleurisy [8], and APP serotype 2 together with PRRSV was described to be significantly associated with pleurisy [9]. Dorsocaudal pleurisy has been reported to be strongly associated with APP [1, 6, 10, 11]

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