- Source: Porcine adenovirus
Porcine adenovirus (aka pADV 1-5 or pADV A-C) is a virus in the family Adenoviridae. It causes mild gastrointestinal diseases in pigs and is thought to contribute to multifactorial porcine respiratory diseases complexes. Several strains of the virus can be found worldwide, and transmission occurs horizontally by the fecal-oral route.
Clinical signs
Infection is often subclinical, and when clinical signs are seen they are mild and short-lived.
Gastrointestinal signs such as diarrhoea, anorexia and dehydration are most commonly seen in piglets. Reproductive signs such as abortion can be seen in adult sows.
Respiratory signs such as coughing can be seen if the infection is part of a multifactorial respiratory disease complex.
Diagnosis and treatment
Histology, virus isolation, electron microscopy, immunoperoxidase and immunofluorescent staining, immunodiffusion, complement fixation, virus neutralisation and ELISA can all be used to confirm diagnosis.
Generally no treatment is required.
See also
Bovine adenovirus
References
Porcine Adenovirus, reviewed and published by WikiVet at http://en.wikivet.net/Porcine_Adenovirus, accessed 16/09/2011.
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