Host risk factors in relation to the occurrence of Japanese encephalitis virus in pigs and dogs in northern Vietnam

Japanese encephalitis is the leading cause of encephalitis in Asia. The disease is caused by Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV), a vector-borne virus that has an enzootic cycle involving mosquitoes, pigs and birds. Surveillance programs for detection of virus activity can function as an early warn...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Gustafsson, Linnéa
Formato: H3
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Clinical Sciences (until 231231) 2020
Materias:
_version_ 1855572737330774016
author Gustafsson, Linnéa
author_browse Gustafsson, Linnéa
author_facet Gustafsson, Linnéa
author_sort Gustafsson, Linnéa
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Japanese encephalitis is the leading cause of encephalitis in Asia. The disease is caused by Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV), a vector-borne virus that has an enzootic cycle involving mosquitoes, pigs and birds. Surveillance programs for detection of virus activity can function as an early warning system of increased risk of transmission and disease outbreak. Surveillance of JEV infection is often performed using sentinel animals like pigs. Dogs have recently been shown to be good sentinels as well. The objective of this study was to determine the seroprevalence and to assess the host factors in pigs and dogs favoring JEV infection in Vietnam. For this purpose, 114 blood samples were collected from dogs in rural areas in the provinces of Hai Duong and Thai Binh in northern Vietnam. Ten blood samples were retrieved from pigs in the same areas. In addition, 250 blood samples were collected from pigs originating from all over Vietnam, in a slaughterhouse in Hanoi. Blood samples were tested for antibodies against JEV using a competitive ELISA method. A total of 30% pigs (n =78) and 72% of dogs (n=82) were JEV seropositive. The seroprevalence in pigs found in this study is much lower than the previously found; in the range of 60-100%.This could be indicative of a reduced infection pressure due to the ongoing depopulation of pigs as a result of the recent outbreak of African swine fever in the country. Further, the seroprevalence was lower in the south and south-central areas (19-26%) compared to the north (87%). The seroprevalence among dogs was higher than in earlier studies suggesting that people in these areas are exposed to JEV in high extent. The results from the dog samples show a possible correlation between age and JEV seropositivity. Also breed seems to play a role for the risk of being seropositive.
format H3
id RepoSLU16389
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher SLU/Dept. of Clinical Sciences (until 231231)
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Clinical Sciences (until 231231)
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU163892023-09-01T01:15:11Z Host risk factors in relation to the occurrence of Japanese encephalitis virus in pigs and dogs in northern Vietnam Gustafsson, Linnéa Japanese encephalitis JEV pig dog Vietnam antibodies risk factors Japanese encephalitis is the leading cause of encephalitis in Asia. The disease is caused by Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV), a vector-borne virus that has an enzootic cycle involving mosquitoes, pigs and birds. Surveillance programs for detection of virus activity can function as an early warning system of increased risk of transmission and disease outbreak. Surveillance of JEV infection is often performed using sentinel animals like pigs. Dogs have recently been shown to be good sentinels as well. The objective of this study was to determine the seroprevalence and to assess the host factors in pigs and dogs favoring JEV infection in Vietnam. For this purpose, 114 blood samples were collected from dogs in rural areas in the provinces of Hai Duong and Thai Binh in northern Vietnam. Ten blood samples were retrieved from pigs in the same areas. In addition, 250 blood samples were collected from pigs originating from all over Vietnam, in a slaughterhouse in Hanoi. Blood samples were tested for antibodies against JEV using a competitive ELISA method. A total of 30% pigs (n =78) and 72% of dogs (n=82) were JEV seropositive. The seroprevalence in pigs found in this study is much lower than the previously found; in the range of 60-100%.This could be indicative of a reduced infection pressure due to the ongoing depopulation of pigs as a result of the recent outbreak of African swine fever in the country. Further, the seroprevalence was lower in the south and south-central areas (19-26%) compared to the north (87%). The seroprevalence among dogs was higher than in earlier studies suggesting that people in these areas are exposed to JEV in high extent. The results from the dog samples show a possible correlation between age and JEV seropositivity. Also breed seems to play a role for the risk of being seropositive. SLU/Dept. of Clinical Sciences (until 231231) 2020 H3 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/16389/
spellingShingle Japanese encephalitis
JEV
pig
dog
Vietnam
antibodies
risk factors
Gustafsson, Linnéa
Host risk factors in relation to the occurrence of Japanese encephalitis virus in pigs and dogs in northern Vietnam
title Host risk factors in relation to the occurrence of Japanese encephalitis virus in pigs and dogs in northern Vietnam
title_full Host risk factors in relation to the occurrence of Japanese encephalitis virus in pigs and dogs in northern Vietnam
title_fullStr Host risk factors in relation to the occurrence of Japanese encephalitis virus in pigs and dogs in northern Vietnam
title_full_unstemmed Host risk factors in relation to the occurrence of Japanese encephalitis virus in pigs and dogs in northern Vietnam
title_short Host risk factors in relation to the occurrence of Japanese encephalitis virus in pigs and dogs in northern Vietnam
title_sort host risk factors in relation to the occurrence of japanese encephalitis virus in pigs and dogs in northern vietnam
topic Japanese encephalitis
JEV
pig
dog
Vietnam
antibodies
risk factors