Jembrana disease

Jembrana disease is an acute viral disease of cattle.[1] While it produces relatively mild symptoms in taurine cattle, the Jembrana virus is particularly severe in Bali cattle where it has a fatality rate of approximately seventeen percent.[2] Its first documented outbreak occurred in 1964 in the Jembrana district of Bali, Indonesia.[1] Within two years of its appearance the disease had killed an estimated 26,000 of the approximately 300,000 cattle on Bali Island.[1] The virus belongs to the Lentivirus genus, which include immunodeficiency viruses such as HIV.[1] Instead of the chronic disease produced by most Lentivruses Jembrana disease produces acute effects.[2] After an incubation period of 5–12 days the disease produces symptoms including inappetence, fever, lethargy, enlargement of the lymph nodes, and diarrhoea. There is at least one strain that has been sequenced.[3]

See also

Acute (medicine)

Lentivirus

Incubation period

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 G.E., Wilcox (8 March 1995). "Recent advances in the understanding of Jembrana disease". Veterinary Microbiology.
  2. 1 2 Chadwick, B.J. (1998). "Detection of Jembrana disease virus in spleen, lymph nodes, bone marrow and other tissues by in situ hybridization of paraffin-embedded sections" (PDF). Journal of General Virology.
  3. Chadwick, BJ (1995). "Nucleotide sequence analysis of Jembrana disease virus: a bovine lentivirus associated with an acute disease syndrome.". Journal of General Virology. PMID 9049370.


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