| Vesicular stomatitis virus |
Vesicular stomatitis is an acute viral vesicular disease of cattle, horses, deer and pigs (and occasionally humans). The etiologic agent, vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), is a rhabdovirus. There are 2 serotypes of VSV, New Jersey and Indiana. Infection with one serotype is not cross-protective for the second serotype.
VSV versus the other vesicular disease viruses of livestock:
Vesicular stomatitis virus infection resembles foot-and-mouth disease when it occurs in cattle, and the other viral vesicular diseases when it occurs in pigs. However, VSV is the only one of the "Big 4" viral vesicular diseases of livestock (foot and mouth disease virus [FMDV], swine vesicular disease virus [SVDV], vesicular exanthema of swine virus [VESV] and VSV) that infects horses (inoculation of a horse's tongue was historically used to differentiate VSV from the others). VSV is also the most important of these 4 viruses as a zoonotic agent for humans.
Vesicular stomatitis virus is primarily viewed as an arbovirus.
Although often treated as an "exotic" disease to the U.S., there is one enzootic focus of VSV in the country (Ossabaw Island just off the Georgia coast), and outbreaks of VSV infection occur periodically in the western U.S.
VS in horses, cattle and swine:
Diagnosis in livestock:
Control of outbreaks is dependent upon rapid recognition of initial cases, quarantine and restriction of movement of infected and in-contact animals, and insect control. There are no commercially-available VSV vaccines in the U.S., but an autologous vaccine was made in 1995 to help control that outbreak. Several inactivated vaccines containing both the Indiana and New Jersey serotypes are used in Central and South America.
VS in humans:
References:
Acha, P.N. and B. Szyfres (Eds.). 1989. Zoonoses and Communicable Diseases Common to Man and Animals. Pan American Health Organization; Washington, D.C.
Bauer, K. 1997. Foot and mouth disease as zoonosis. Arch. Virol. Supp. 13:95-97.
Benenson, A.S. (Ed.). 1995. Control of Communicable Diseases Manual. American Public Health Assoc.; Washington, D.C.
Letchworth, G.J. et al. 1999. Vesicular stomatitis. Vet. J. (BR) 157: 239-260.
Rodriguez, L.L. and S.T. Nichol. 1999. Vesicular stomatitis viruses, in: Encyclopedia of Virology 2nd Edition (Eds. R.G. Webster and A. Granoff), (In press). Academic Press; London.
Stallknecht D.E. et al. 1999. Potential for contact and mechanical vector transmission of vesicular stomatitis virus New Jersey in pigs. A.J.V.R. 60:43-48.