• Title/Summary/Keyword: White matter degeneration

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Polioencephalomyelitis in Pigs Experimentally Infected with Porcine Enterovirus Isolated in Korea: I. Histopathological Observations (Enterovirus 감염에 의한 자돈의 Polioencephalomyelit: I. 병리조직학적 관찰)

  • Shin, Tae-kyun;Lee, Cha-soo
    • Korean Journal of Veterinary Research
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    • v.25 no.2
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    • pp.103-112
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    • 1985
  • A total of 1-0 colostrum-deprived pigs (1 or 2-day-old) and 6 pigs (35-day-old), which had been raised by natural maternal nursing, were used to study the pathogenicity of the porcine enteroviruses by the intracerebral and intramuscular routes of inoculation, which the enterovirus were isolated from the diseased pigs in Korea. The porcine enteroviruses produced an identical polioencephalomyelitis in colostrum-deprived pigs and 35-day-old pigs, which manifested clinical signs and histopathological changes. Clinically it was characterized by incoordination, rise in rectal temperature, ataxia, flaccid paralysis in all the experimental groups. Histopathologically, the lesions were present in both grey and white matter at all levels of central nervous system, though usually more severe in the grey matter. These changes were characterized by meningeal infiltration, degeneration of nerve cells, neuronophagia, diffuse and focal gliosis, glial nodules and perivascular lymphocytic infiltrations. Ganglionitis of the dorsal root ganglia was frequently observed. On the basis of the clinical and histopathological changes mentioned above, it was concluded that porcine enteroviruses isolated in Korea were pathogenic strains which could produce polioencephalomyelitis in pigs. The most severe Jisease was prcduced by the inoculation of both enterovirus and hog cholera vaccine in the 35-day-old pigs at a time when colostral immunity presumably was low. The porcine enterovirus infections seemed to be associated with certain stress factor such as hog cholera vaccine in or immediately following the weanling period.

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