Farms.com Home   News

Researchers Track the Movement of PRRS from the Sow to the Fetus

Research being conducted by the Western College of Veterinary Medicine is shedding new light on the mechanisms that result in the loss of fetuses among sows infected by the virus responsible for Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome. Scientists with the Western College of Veterinary Medicine are looking at the effect of pathogens that infect the uterus of the sow, focussing on Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome, on both the sow and her offspring.
 
Dr. Carol Malgarin, a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine and a PhD candidate with the Western College of Veterinary Medicine, explains pregnant gilts were inoculated with PRRS at day 85 of gestation and the pathogen was tracked as it moved to their offspring.
 
Clip-Dr. Carol Malgarin-Western College of Veterinary Medicine:
 
We started to euthanize and collect samples in different timepoints after the inoculation, so we had five different timepoints.
 
With that we saw the pathway that this virus was crossing and getting from the mother to the fetus. We saw that the first fetal sample that was positive for the virus was the serum, so from the blood of the fetus, by five days post infection.
 
For the mother the endometrium and placenta are already infected by two days post infection so that was faster than we were expecting but it shows that the virus does infect first the endometrial tissues then the placenta and then goes to the fetal serum then it goes to the fetal thymus and there is where the virus really increases its replication and makes home in the fetus.
Source : Farmscape

Trending Video

USDA Feb Crop Report a WIN for Soybeans + 1 Year Trade Truce Extension

Video: USDA Feb Crop Report a WIN for Soybeans + 1 Year Trade Truce Extension


USDA took Trumps comments that China would buy more U.S. soybeans seriously and headline news that the U.S./China trade truce would be extended when Trump/Xi meet in the first week of April was a BIG WIN for soybeans this week! 2026 “Mini” U.S. ethanol boom thanks to 45Z + China’s ban of phosphates from Feb. – August of 2026 will not help lower fertilizer prices anytime soon! 30 mmt of Chinese corn harvest is of poor quality and maybe a technical breakout in wheat futures.

*Apologies! Where we talk about the latest CFTC update as of 10th Feb 2026, managed money funds covered their net short position in canola to the tune of +42,746 week-on-week to flip to net long 145 contracts and not (as we mistakenly said) +90,009 wk/wk to 47,408.