Survival of classic swine fever virus in hams made from the meat of pigs vaccinated with the PAV-250 strain and unvaccinated pigs

Autores/as

  • Heidi Amezcua Hempel Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, FES-Cuautitlán, Laboratorio de Virología. Av. Primero de Mayo S/N, Campo I, Col. Santa María las Torres, Cuautitlán Izcalli. Estado de México. México.
  • María Salud Rubio Lozano Facultad de medicina Veterinaria y Zootecnia
  • Eliseo Manuel Hernández Baumgarten Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, FES-Cuautitlán, Laboratorio de Virología. Av. Primero de Mayo S/N, Campo I, Col. Santa María las Torres, Cuautitlán Izcalli. Estado de México. México.
  • Pablo Correa Girón † Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Forestales Agrícolas y Pecuarias, CENID-Microbiología, Ciudad de México. México.
  • Oscar Torres Ángeles Universidad Autónoma de Morelos, Facultad de Farmacia. Cuernavaca, Morelos, México.
  • María Antonia Coba Ayala Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Forestales Agrícolas y Pecuarias, CENID-Microbiología, Ciudad de México. México.
  • Jose Abel Ciprián Carrasco Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, FES-Cuautitlán, Laboratorio de Virología. Av. Primero de Mayo S/N, Campo I, Col. Santa María las Torres, Cuautitlán Izcalli. Estado de México. México.
  • Susana Elisa Mendoza Elvira Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, FES-Cuautitlán, Laboratorio de Virología. Av. Primero de Mayo S/N, Campo I, Col. Santa María las Torres, Cuautitlán Izcalli. Estado de México. México.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22319/rmcp.v10i3.4528

Palabras clave:

Fiebre porcina clásica, Vacuna PAV-250, Jamones, México

Resumen

The study was to determine the presence of Classical Swine Fever virus (CSFv), in the meat of vaccinated pigs with the PAV-250 strain and then challenged using the same strain. Five treatment groups were established (each with four pigs). Group A: Pigs that
were fed with processed hams from negative animals; Group B: Pigs that were fed with processed hams from commercial pigs inoculated with the ALD (reference strain) (titre of 104.0/ml); Group C: Pigs fed with processed hams from pigs infected with the virulent ALD strain (titre of 102.5/ml); Group D: Pigs fed with processed hams from pigs vaccinated with the PAV-250 strain and challenged with the ALD strain (titre of 101.1/ml); and Group E: Pigs fed with processed hams from pigs vaccinated with two doses of the PAV-250 strain and challenged with the ALD strain (negative). Blood samples were taken at d 1, 5, 10, 15 and 20 for biometric analysis. Groups B, C and D manifested clinical signs of CSFv: 40 °C temperature, anorexia, paralysis, vomiting, diarrhea, tremor, hirsute hair and cyanosis. Pigs were slaughtered and necropsies performed to identify lesions in tissues. Results of direct immunofluorescence testing of tissues were positive and the virus was recovered. Under these study conditions, it was found that CSFv resisted the cooking method at 68 °C for 40 min in hams from unvaccinated pigs, and that the virus was able to transmit the disease to healthy unvaccinated pigs, whereas the hams from the vaccinated animals did not transmit the virus.

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Publicado

11.09.2019

Cómo citar

Amezcua Hempel, H., Rubio Lozano, M. S., Hernández Baumgarten, E. M., Correa Girón †, P., Torres Ángeles, O., Coba Ayala, M. A., … Mendoza Elvira, S. E. (2019). Survival of classic swine fever virus in hams made from the meat of pigs vaccinated with the PAV-250 strain and unvaccinated pigs. Revista Mexicana De Ciencias Pecuarias, 10(3), 536–551. https://doi.org/10.22319/rmcp.v10i3.4528
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