Posts Tagged ‘immunity’

UK Foot and Mouth Disease Outbreak

Saturday, September 22nd, 2007

Dead cow

  • 23rd September: A suspected new case of foot-and-mouth is being investigated on the Hampshire-West Sussex border. Bluetongue is confirmed on a farm in Suffolk.
  • 14th September: Defra announces that a second farm in Surrey is affected, imposes new protection and surveillance zone and confirms that sequencing tests of the virus have shown it to be type 01 BFS67, the same strain of virus responsible for the August outbreak.
  • 8th September: The last restrictions imposed on livestock movement in the UK following the foot-and-mouth disease outbreak were lifted, but the earliest the UK can achieve international foot-and-mouth disease-free status is 7th November.

Defra: Interactive map

10 Facts About Foot and Mouth Disease:

  1. Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is a highly infectious disease of hoofed animals (ungulates) such as cattle, sheep, goats and pigs. It can also infect elephants, rats, and hedgehogs.
  2. The symptoms of FMD are fever followed by the development of vesicles (blisters) chiefly in the mouth and on the feet.
  3. Affected animals suffer weight loss from which they do not recover for several months, and in cows milk production can decline significantly. Although most animals eventually recover from FMD the disease can be fatal, especially in newborn animals.
  4. Foot and mouth disease is caused by a Picornavirus.
  5. FMD has an incubation period of 2-14 days before symptoms appear. The virus can survive in dry faecal material for 14 days in summer, in slurry for six months in winter, in urine for 39 days and on the soil for up to 28 days.
  6. Some infected animals remain asymptomatic carriers of FMD which can transmit the disease to other animals.
  7. The last major outbreak of foot and mouth disease in the UK in 2001 led to the slaughter of between 6.5 to 10 million animals and is estimated to have cost the country up to £8.5 billion.
  8. The United States, Canada, Australia, Japan, Indonesia and Korea are currently free of FMD, but the disease is present in Eastern Europe, Asia, Africa and South America.
  9. Vaccination against FMD is difficult because there are seven serotypes of the virus and a vaccine for one serotype does not protect against any others. Vaccination only provides temporary immunity. Defra Decision Tree for Disease Control Strategies against FMD
  10. Humans can be infected with foot-and-mouth disease through close contact with infected animals, but this is extremely rare and human infections are not fatal. Because the virus that causes FMD is sensitive to stomach acid, it cannot spread to humans via consumption of infected meat or milk.