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1 June 2007 Epidemiologic Investigation of an Outbreak of Goose Parvovirus Infection in Sweden
Désirée S. Jansson, Ricardo Feinstein, Veronika Kardi, Tamás Mató, Vilmos Palya
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Abstract

SUMMARY. An outbreak of goose parvovirus (GPV) infection on a Swedish goose farm in the spring of 2004 increased the mortality rates from 2% in the early unaffected hatches to 90% and 99% respectively in the two hatches following virus introduction and 40% in goslings hatched later in the same breeding season. In this paper we describe the clinical observations, diagnostic procedures, and epidemiologic investigation carried out to elucidate the source of the infection. The diagnosis was confirmed by serology, virus isolation, and sequence analysis of a 493-bp-long fragment of the VP1 gene. Phylogenetically the causative virus was closely related to pathogenic GPV strains isolated in 2003 and 2004 from Poland and the United Kingdom, respectively. The Swedish isolate exhibited less homology with pathogenic strains from Hungary and Asia and with attenuated vaccine strains. The epidemiologic investigation showed that the virus was first introduced to a contract farm (farm A) and then was transferred with newly hatched goslings to the farm that had submitted the birds for necropsy (index farm). The exact time and source of the virus introduction to farm A could not be determined with absolute certainty. Possible sources of the infection included backyard goose eggs that had been delivered to farm A for subcontract incubation and hatching, wild geese that frequented the flock of breeding geese on pasture on farm A, and a clutch of Canada goose eggs (Branta canadensis) that had been produced by wild geese and was hatched in the same machine as the eggs produced by farm A.

Désirée S. Jansson, Ricardo Feinstein, Veronika Kardi, Tamás Mató, and Vilmos Palya "Epidemiologic Investigation of an Outbreak of Goose Parvovirus Infection in Sweden," Avian Diseases 51(2), 609-613, (1 June 2007). https://doi.org/10.1637/0005-2086(2007)51[609:EIOAOO]2.0.CO;2
Received: 25 August 2006; Published: 1 June 2007
KEYWORDS
Derzsy's disease
domestic goose
epidemiology
goose parvovirus
phylogeny
VP1 gene
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