Abstract

Pigs in three specialized fattening herds were studied with respect to the effect of infection with Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae on weight gain. Individual pigs were weighed four times at 4-week intervals during the fattening period and their daily weight gain over the rearing period was calculated. A blood sample was collected on each weighing occasion and analysed for the presence of antibodies to M. hyopneumoniae. The lungs of the principals were inspected at slaughter and the extent of pneumonic lesions was registered by a specially developed technique that has been proven to warrant a high degree of repeatability. No serum antibodies to M. hyopneumoniae were detected in one of the herds, and no pneumonic lesions were recorded at slaughter in that herd. In the other two herds, the prevalence of pigs with serum antibodies to M. hyopneumoniae increased from 6 to 54% and from 31 to 81%, respectively, during the fattening period. The prevalence of pneumonic lesions at slaughter in these herds was higher the later the pigs seroconverted. On the other hand, the extension of the lung lesions tended to be higher among pigs that seroconverted early during the rearing period. Infections with M. hyopneumoniae acquired early during the rearing, presumably strengthened by secondary infections and environmental errors, was found to decrease the daily weight gain of the pigs. However, even non-complicated M. hyopneumoniae infections acquired late in the fattening period were associated with reduced daily weight gain. That growth reduction was estimated to be at least 60 g (about 6%) after adjusting for herd, pen, initial weight and sex.

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