
pmid: 8579558
SUMMARY Five Suffolk sheep, held in a high‐security isolation room, were exposed for 2 hours to the aerosol of 3 mature pigs that had been infected with foot‐and‐mouth disease virus (FMDV), strain O1‐BFS. The fleeces of 3 of the sheep were contaminated with FMDV at 2 days post exposure (dpe), while at 5 dpe the fleeces of all 5 sheep were more extensively, and more heavily, contaminated. The persistence of FMDV on contaminated wool was examined in vitro using multiple 0.5 g samples of Merino wool that were each contaminated with one of 3 strains of FMDV in tissue‐culture medium: O1‐BFS, O‐Morocco (O‐MOR 9/91) or an Asia 1 strain (TAI 1/90). Wool samples were held at either 4°C, 18°C or 37°C, and decay curves were established for each virus at each temperature. These curves predicted that O1‐BFS, O‐MOR 9/91 and TAI 1/90 would fall below detect‐able levels at 72, 70 and 48 days post contamination (pc), respectively, for wool stored at 4°C; at 11, 12 and 12 days pc, respectively, for wool stored at 18°C; and at 57, 68 and 33 hours pc, respectively, for wool stored at 37°C. For wool contaminated with O1‐BFS‐infected sheep faeces, urine or blood, or with O1‐BFS‐infected cattle saliva, decay curves predicted virus to persist for 5 to 11 days pc at 18°C. We demonstrated that the simulated scouring of FMDV‐contaminated wool at 60° to 70°C would usually reduce virus to below detectable levels. The detergent component of the scouring process had little, if any, antiviral activity, and scouring at 20°C or 50°C had limited impact on FMDV titres. We recommend that either (1) simple storage of FMDV‐contaminated wool for 4 weeks at temperatures of 18°C or higher, or (2) scouring of contaminated wool at 60° to 70°C would be sufficient to remove the threat of FMDV‐contaminated wool being infectious to other animals.
Male, Sheep, Time Factors, Swine, Wool, Detergents, Sheep Diseases, Aphthovirus, Foot-and-Mouth Disease, Animals, Cattle
Male, Sheep, Time Factors, Swine, Wool, Detergents, Sheep Diseases, Aphthovirus, Foot-and-Mouth Disease, Animals, Cattle
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