2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2015.08.004
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Bluetongue in small ruminants: An opinionated review, with a brief appraisal of the 2014 outbreak of the disease in Greece and the south-east Europe

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Cited by 28 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…This variability in the severity of BTV infection has been attributed to numerous host factors, such as the breed, health and age of the ruminant (Caporale et al., ; Maclachlan, Drew, Darpel, & Worwa, ). It has been previously reported that in field settings, environmental factors, such as exposure to sunlight, elevated temperatures, stress and bacterial or viral co‐infections can exacerbate BT clinical signs in sheep (Kyriakis et al., ). Therefore, the clinical presentation of infection with the BTV‐8 strains in the field is likely to be more severe than what we have reported in this study where animals were housed within the high‐sanitary and controlled‐husbandry conditions of the containment facilities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This variability in the severity of BTV infection has been attributed to numerous host factors, such as the breed, health and age of the ruminant (Caporale et al., ; Maclachlan, Drew, Darpel, & Worwa, ). It has been previously reported that in field settings, environmental factors, such as exposure to sunlight, elevated temperatures, stress and bacterial or viral co‐infections can exacerbate BT clinical signs in sheep (Kyriakis et al., ). Therefore, the clinical presentation of infection with the BTV‐8 strains in the field is likely to be more severe than what we have reported in this study where animals were housed within the high‐sanitary and controlled‐husbandry conditions of the containment facilities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During the epizootic wave of a novel BTV‐4 reassortant in the Balkan region, the highest morbidity and case fatality rates were reported in sheep (8.5% and 37.0%), followed by goats (1.5% and 24.5%) and cattle (2.5% and 6.5%) (Kyriakis et al., ). However, reports of morbidity and case fatality rates in domestic ruminants were contradictory, particularly the morbidity rate in cattle (Katsoulos et al., ; Kyriakis et al., , ProMED‐mail, ). In the 10 ruminants experimentally infected with BTV‐4, clinical signs were mild in sheep and goats and no obvious clinical signs were observed in cattle, except for a transient increase in body temperature.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sequence comparison of the 10 segments of BTV‐4 isolates from Greece, Bulgaria, Hungary and Corsica revealed reassortment events between segments of various homotypic and heterotypic BTV serotypes. These serotypes included BTV‐24, BTV‐4, BTV‐2 and BTV‐1 strains from North African and Western Mediterranean countries, respectively (Hornyák et al., ; Kyriakis et al., , ProMED‐mail, ; Sailleau et al., ). This novel BTV‐4 strain encountered a largely BTV‐naïve ruminant population in 2014, and a rapid spread throughout the Balkan region was observed.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…southeastern Europe for the first time in 2014 (serotype 4); see Kyriakis et al [7] for a review of European outbreaks of BTV up to 2014 by country and serotype. Recently, BTV serotype 8 has re-emerged in France [8].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%