H1N1 Swine Influenza Virus
Viruses of the classical H1N1 lineage were the dominant cause of influenza among pigs in North America from their first isolation.
Classical H1N1 viruses have also been isolated from pigs in South America, Europe and Asia.
There is only limited evidence of maintenance of human H1N1 influenza viruses after natural introduction into swine populations but human H3N2 viruses have been recovered frequently from pigs in Asia and Europe.
Experimental infection studies have shown that pigs can be infected with a wide range of avian influenza virus (AIVs) and naturally acquired infections of pigs with AIVs have also been documented from multiple areas of the world.
In particular, an avian H1N1 virus introduction into pigs Europe in late 1970s spread throughput much of the European continent and United Kingdom and ultimately became a dominant cause of swine flu in these areas.
These avian-like H1N1 viruses have also undergone genetic/antigenic drift and have spread from pigs to domestic turkeys.
The occurrence of influenza virus infections in pigs poses two important public health issues: zoonotic infections of people with swine influenza viruses and the potential for pigs to serve as hosts for the creation of novel viruses of pandemic potential for the human population.
Infections with swine influenza viruses is generally limited to the respiratory tract, with virus replication demonstrated in epithelial cells of the nasal mucosa, tonsils, trachea, lungs and tracheobronchial lymph nodes.
Swine flu is an acute infections and virus clearance is extremely rapid. In most experimental studies, nasal virus shedding begins on day 1 postinoculation (P1) and ceases within 7 days.
Likewise, swine influenza virus could not be isolated from lungs or other respiratory tract tissues after day 7.
Infections with H1N1, H1N2 and H3N2 subtype viruses are clinically similar, and viruses of all subtypes have been associated with acute respiratory episodes in most European countries.
Disease onset is sudden, after an incubation period of 1 – 3 days. Disease signs typically appear in a large percentage of animals of all ages within a herd or epidemiological unit.
H1N1 Swine Influenza Virus
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