In Context
Over the last few weeks, nearly 3,000 cattle have died in Rajasthan and Gujarat due to a viral infection called the Lumpy Skin Disease (LSD).
Lumpy Skin Disease
- About:
- It is caused by a virus called the Capripoxvirus and is “an emerging threat to livestock worldwide”.
- It is genetically related to the goatpox and sheeppox virus family.
- It infects cattle and water buffalo mainly through vectors such as blood-feeding insects.
- Symptoms:
- the appearance of circular, firm nodes on the animal’s hide or skin that look similar to lumps.
- excessive nasal and salivary secretion.
- Spread:
- The disease is not zoonotic, meaning it does not spread from animals to humans, and humans cannot get infected with it.
- Historically, LSD has remained confined to Africa, where it was first discovered in 1929, and parts of West Asia.
- It was first reported in Asia and the Pacific region in 2019 in north west China, Bangladesh and India.
- Treatment:
- No treatment is available for the disease so prevention by vaccination is the most effective means of control.
- Successful control and eradication of LSD relies on “early detection followed by a rapid and widespread vaccination campaign”
- Once an animal has recovered, it is well protected and cannot be the source of infection for other animals.
Source:IE
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