Establishment of a maedi-visna-free flock after the purchase of infected sheep

Maedi-visna (MV) infection was detected in a cohort of 68 purchased ewes, one of several groups of sheep introduced to a farm after the previous stock had been culled with suspected foot-and-mouth disease in 2001. Except for short periods totalling six to seven weeks when the sheep co-grazed with 13 ewe lambs and ram lambs, the infected cohort was kept separate from other sheep on the farm over a total of 21 months. During this period two crops of lambs were reared from the infected ewes. All the lambs were fattened and killed, and all ewes were culled after the second crop of lambs had been weaned. Subsequent serological testing of the remaining sheep on the farm confirmed the elimination of MV infection from the flock, leading to its acceptance in the Maedi Visna Accreditation Scheme of the Scottish Agricultural College’s Sheep and Goat Health Schemes.

[1]  R. Callan,et al.  Viral diseases of the ruminant nervous system. , 2004, The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice.

[2]  J. Badiola,et al.  Routes of transmission and consequences of small ruminant lentiviruses (SRLVs) infection and eradication schemes. , 2004, Veterinary research.

[3]  R. Juste,et al.  Transmission and control implications of seroconversion to Maedi-Visna virus in Basque dairy-sheep flocks. , 2003, Preventive veterinary medicine.

[4]  D. Knowles Laboratory diagnostic tests for retrovirus infections of small ruminants. , 1997, The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice.

[5]  J. Rowe,et al.  Risk factors for transmission and methods for control of caprine arthritis-encephalitis virus infection. , 1997, The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice.

[6]  A. de la Concha-Bermejillo Maedi-Visna and ovine progressive pneumonia. , 1997, The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice.

[7]  P. Greenwood,et al.  Prevalence, spread and control of caprine arthritis-encephalitis virus in dairy goat herds in New South Wales. , 1995, Australian veterinary journal.

[8]  J. Rowe,et al.  Modes of transmission of caprine arthritis-encephalitis virus infection , 1993 .

[9]  S. Done,et al.  Concurrent maedi-visna virus infection and pulmonary adenomatosis in a commercial breeding flock in East Anglia , 1990, Veterinary Record.

[10]  G. F. de Boer,et al.  Maedi-visna control in sheep. I. Artificial rearing of colostrum-deprived lambs. , 1983, Veterinary microbiology.

[11]  G. F. de Boer,et al.  Studies in epidemiology of maedi/visna in sheep. , 1979, Research in veterinary science.