European
Dressage News
Inquiry
Into the Foot and Mouth Disease
Q: What causes foot-and-mouth disease?
A: Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is an acute infectious
viral disease caused by a picornavirus. Symptoms are
fever, followed by the development of vesicles (blisters)
chiefly in the mouth and on the feet. It is probably
more infectious than any other disease affecting animals
and spreads rapidly if uncontrolled.
Q: Which animals are affected?
A: It affects cattle, sheep, pigs and goats. Wild and
domestic cloven-hoofed animals and elephants, hedgehogs
and rats are also susceptible.
Q: Can horses and ponies contract FMD?
A: No, horses and ponies definitely cannot contract
foot-and-mouth disease.
Q: If horses cannot catch FMD, why are race meetings
etc cancelled or postponed?
A: The concern is that horses, humans, dogs, vehicles,
etc can carry the virus and so spread it from one area
to another. Cattle trucks, lorries, markets and loading
ramps, anywhere infected animals may have been present,
are sources of infection until effectively disinfected.
Roads may also become contaminated and the virus picked
up and carried on the wheels of passing vehicles such
as delivery lorries and milk tankers. Any person who
has attended diseased animals can spread the disease,
so vets need to be very careful. Dogs, cats, poultry,
birds, wild game and vermin may also carry infected
material.
Q: Can human beings contract FMD?
A: Advice from the Department of Health is that the
disease in man is very rare. The disease has no implication
for the human food chain.
Q: How does the disease spread?
A: The virus spreads most effectively directly from
one animal to another ¿ for example, one pig coughing
droplets containing virus on to another ¿ but it can
also be spread: l Indirectly by carriers ¿ for instance,
the virus may spread from an infected farm on a horse¿s
hooves to a previously uninfected area. l Airborne spread
of the virus can take place. Under favourable climatic
conditions the disease may be spread considerable distances
by this route ¿ up to at least 60km overland and 300km
by sea. l The virus may be present in milk, dung and
even carcasses. This is why disinfection is important
and why meat and dairy products are being confiscated
by customs on arrival in other countries. l Imported
meat or dairy products, infected with the virus are
a source of infection. Lamb bones brought in from South
America were thought to have caused the outbreak in
1967.
Q: How long does the virus stay in the environment?
A: Under favourable conditions, the FMD virus can survive
for long periods. It can persist in the environment
and in contaminated fodder for up to one month, depending
on the temperature and other conditions.
Q: What conditions favour the virus?
A: Heat, sunlight and disinfectants will destroy the
virus, whereas cold and darkness tend to keep it alive.
It is preserved by refrigeration and freezing and progressively
inactivated by temperatures above 50°C.
Q: How do I recognise FMD?
A: You will see lameness and dribbling in more than
one animal.
Q: Is FMD fatal?
A: If FMD is left to run its natural course, the majority
of animals will survive the infection and recover in
two to three weeks. Some, particularly young stock,
will die, but most will get better.
Q: So why does infected stock have to be destroyed?
A: The problem is that they are unlikely to thrive
thereafter and will not fatten as efficiently. Dairy
cows, in particular, have long-lasting complications,
such as reduced milk yields, abortion and lameness.
Q: Do animals have any natural immunity to FMD?
A: This strain of FMD has been shown to be the very
infectious pan-Asiatic O type, which is one of seven
main types of FMD virus. After having the infection,
the animals will acquire some natural immunity to that
strain of the virus; however, it is like colds and flu
in that infection with one type of virus provides little
or no protection against attacks by any of the others.
Q: Do such animals carry the disease?
A: Yes, FMD can persist in the throat of cattle for
up to 30 months and nine months in sheep.
Q: Is vaccination possible?
A: Vaccination is available to control the disease
using an inactivated virus and has been used effectively
elsewhere in the world. A vaccination programme usually
entails two doses one month apart and provides immunity
for around six months, provided the vaccine involves
the correct strain. In this respect, it is similar to
the human flu vaccination. Vaccinated animals will have
antibodies to FMD. If blood is taken and tested after
vaccination, it is not possible to distinguish whether
they have immunity from the disease or the vaccine.
The problem with vaccination is that exports would be
limited if Britain could not maintain her disease-free
status. Some countries insist on imports only from countries
that are recognised to be FMD-free, both without disease
and with no vaccination programme.
Q: How did the disease reach the UK?
A: The disease is present in many countries of the
world. There was an outbreak in Greece within the EU
last year. The big outbreak in the 1960s was thought
to have originated in a lamb carcass brought in from
South America. It is likely, but still unproven, that
this outbreak may have started similarly. The smallholding
in Northumberland at the centre of the current crisis
was fattening pigs by swill feeding. Proper swill feeding
requires the swill (food scraps) to be heated thoroughly
before being fed to the pigs. If this was not done,
it could have allowed the passage of disease to the
animals.
Q: If the disease is not fatal, why are infected
animals slaughtered?
A: The justification for the slaughter policy is economic
in that, according to the MAFF website (www.maff.gov.uk),
"widespread disease throughout the countryside would
be economically disastrous".
Source: Horse
and Hound Magazine
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