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Experiences from the 2014 outbreak of bluetongue in Greece.
Vasileiou, N G C; Fthenakis, G C; Amiridis, G S; Athanasiou, L V; Birtsas, P; Chatzopoulos, D C; Chouzouris, T M; Giannakopoulos, A; Ioannidi, K S; Kalonaki, S N; Katsafadou, A I; Kyriakis, C S; Mavrogianni, V S; Papadopoulos, E; Spyrou, V; Valiakos, G; Venianaki, A P; Billinis, C.
Afiliação
  • Vasileiou NGC; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Fthenakis GC; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Amiridis GS; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Athanasiou LV; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Birtsas P; Technological Education Institute of Thessaly, Larissa, Greece.
  • Chatzopoulos DC; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Chouzouris TM; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Giannakopoulos A; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Ioannidi KS; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Kalonaki SN; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Katsafadou AI; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Kyriakis CS; College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA.
  • Mavrogianni VS; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Papadopoulos E; School of Veterinary Medicine, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece.
  • Spyrou V; Technological Education Institute of Thessaly, Larissa, Greece.
  • Valiakos G; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Venianaki AP; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
  • Billinis C; Veterinary Faculty, University of Thessaly, Karditsa, Greece.
Small Rumin Res ; 142: 61-68, 2016 Sep.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32288210
ABSTRACT
Objective of this paper was to review relevant work and to present a general account of the bluetongue outbreak, which occurred in Greece in 2014. In total, 2895 outbreaks of the disease have been reported by the veterinary authorities of Greece; sheep, goats and cattle were affected with officially reported morbidity rates of 11.0%, 2.0% and 3.5%, respectively. No vaccinations were allowed and conservative measures were implemented to attempt to limit the disease, which at the end had expanded throughout the country. In field investigations, a significantly higher bluetongue morbidity rate (27.5%) in sheep has been reported. During that work, clinical anaemia was encountered, which was characterised as macrocytic, hypochromic, regenerative and non-haemolytic. Other investigations, which are reviewed in this paper, have described an outbreak of Citrobacter freundii-associated enteritis in newborn kids, offspring of goats subclinically infected with Bluetongue virus, increased rate of early embryonic deaths, reduced conception rates, increased incidence risk of mastitis and reduced milk yield in herds of subclinically-infected cattle and detection of the virus from hunter-harvested tissue samples of roe-deer. In 2015, vaccines against the disease have been licenced; vaccinations started in May 2015. Then, in 2015, only one outbreak of the disease was confirmed, which could have been the result of a combination of reasons acting concurrently to prevent further cases.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2016 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2016 Tipo de documento: Article