| dc.contributor.author | Ózsvári, László |  | 
| dc.date.accessioned | 2021-03-16T12:29:56Z |  | 
| dc.date.available | 2021-03-16T12:29:56Z |  | 
| dc.date.issued | 2017-05 |  | 
| dc.identifier.citation | Magyar Állatorvosok Lapja 139(5),271-275. (2017) | en_US | 
| dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/10832/2689 |  | 
| dc.description.abstract | Summary
Background: Swine dysentery is an infectious disease that affects growing and 
fattening pigs, causing severe bloody diarrhoea and haemorrhagic colitis, and 
often occurs worldwide including Hungary. Swine dysentery cause significant 
economic losses which are associated with high mortality and medication cost, 
and poor average daily gain (ADG), feed conversion ratio (FCR) and lean meat 
ratio after infection.
Objectives: The aim of the study was to briefly present the clinical symptoms 
and the ways of prophylaxis of the disease with special regard to the effective 
antibiotics, and to economically analyse the metaphylactic antibiotic treatment 
of swine dysentery in Hungarian fattening pig herds.
Materials and Methods: Based on international literature data partial budget 
calculation was used to assess the financial benefits of a 5 days long metaphy lactic antibiotic treatment of swine dysentery in a herd with 10,000 finishing 
pigs by using average Hungarian production and price data of 2016.
Results and Discussion: The most effective prophylactic approach of swine 
dysentery is to avoid the introduction of Brachyspira hyodysenteriae into the herd 
by implementing good biosecurity measures. If the swine herd got infected with 
the pathogen an effective metaphylactic treatment could greatly decrease the 
detrimental production effects of the disease. In swine dysentery infected herds 
an effective metaphylactic antibiotic treatment would result in 3.1% increase in 
ADG, 28.5% decrease in mortality rate and 0.33% reduction in FCR on average 
in the finishing phase compared to a herd without swine dysentery control. The 
estimation predicts about €90,000 extra gross margin (income over feed cost) 
on herd level in a year and more than €2.5 extra gross margin per finished pig. 
If the treatment cost was less than €2.5 per finished pig the farmer would be 
better off. | en_US | 
| dc.language.iso | hu | en_US | 
| dc.publisher | Magyar Állatorvosok Lapja | en_US | 
| dc.title | A sertésdizentéria elleni védekezés  gazdasági jelentősége | en_US | 
| dc.title.alternative | Economic significance of  swine dysentery control | en_US | 
| dc.type | Article | en_US | 
| dcterms.bibliographicCitation | Magyar Állatorvosok Lapja 139(5),271-275. (2017) |  |