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Etiology, Epizootiology and Control of Maedi-Visna in Dairy Sheep: A Review

Aphrodite I. Kalogianni, Ioannis Bossis, Loukia V. Ekateriniadou, Athanasios Ι. Gelasakis

2020Animals63 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Maedi-visna (MV) in sheep is caused by maedi-visna virus (MVV), a small ruminant lentivirus (SRLV) that causes chronic infection and inflammatory lesions in infected animals. Pneumonia and mastitis are its predominant clinical manifestations, and the tissues infected by MVV are mainly the lungs, the mammary gland, the nervous system and the joints. MV has a worldwide distribution with distinct MVV transmission patterns depending on circulating strains and regionally applied control/eradication schemes. Nevertheless, the prevalence rate of MV universally increases. Currently, gaps in understanding the epizootiology of MV, the continuous mutation of existing and the emergence of new small ruminant lentiviruses (SRLVs) strains, lack of an effective detection protocol and the inefficiency of currently applied preventive measures render elimination of MV an unrealistic target. Therefore, modifications on the existing MV surveillance and control schemes on an evidentiary basis are necessary. Updated control schemes require the development of diagnostic protocols for the early and definitive diagnosis of MVV infections. The objectives of this review are to summarize the current knowledge in the epizootiology and control of MV in dairy sheep, to describe the research framework and to cover existing gaps in understanding future challenges regarding MV.

Topics & Concepts

EpizootiologyBiologyEtiologyLentivirusTransmission (telecommunications)MedicineVirologyImmunologyHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Viral diseasePathologyTelecommunicationsComputer scienceHIV Research and TreatmentHerpesvirus Infections and TreatmentsVirus-based gene therapy research
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