Research conducted by the University of Minnesota has shed new light on the incidence of Senecavirus A in U.S. Swine Herds.As part of a Swine Health Information Center funded study researchers with the Morrison Swine Health Monitoring Project evaluated over 36 thousand samples submitted to different diagnostic labs from January 2015 to December 2024 to characterise what the Senecavirus A burden looks like.
SHIC Associate Director Dr. Lisa Becton says the team looked at PCR results for Senecavirus A, the types of samples submitted and the locations of premises that submitted samples.
Quote-Dr. Lisa Becton-Swine Health Information Center:
What they found is that the cumulative incidence across the ten years was roughly 2.5 precent, so not a huge incidence but it's still a presence in the sow herd.The other thing noted was a seasonality to when cases were detected with peak detections occurring between the months of July and December.
Last lastly there also appeared to be a regional impact of the diagnoses or the case findings with the Midwest being more predominantly reflected in cases that were positive.