Cargando…

The Evidence for a Causal Link Between Disease and Damaging Behavior in Pigs

Damaging behaviors (DB) such as tail and ear biting are prevalent in pig production and reduce welfare and performance. Anecdotal reports suggest that health challenges increase the risk of tail-biting. The prevalence of tail damage and health problems show high correlations across batches within an...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Boyle, Laura A., Edwards, Sandra A., Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth, Pol, Françoise, Šemrov, Manja Zupan, Schütze, Sabine, Nordgreen, Janicke, Bozakova, Nadya, Sossidou, Evangelia N., Valros, Anna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8828939/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35155642
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.771682
_version_ 1784647954142855168
author Boyle, Laura A.
Edwards, Sandra A.
Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth
Pol, Françoise
Šemrov, Manja Zupan
Schütze, Sabine
Nordgreen, Janicke
Bozakova, Nadya
Sossidou, Evangelia N.
Valros, Anna
author_facet Boyle, Laura A.
Edwards, Sandra A.
Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth
Pol, Françoise
Šemrov, Manja Zupan
Schütze, Sabine
Nordgreen, Janicke
Bozakova, Nadya
Sossidou, Evangelia N.
Valros, Anna
author_sort Boyle, Laura A.
collection PubMed
description Damaging behaviors (DB) such as tail and ear biting are prevalent in pig production and reduce welfare and performance. Anecdotal reports suggest that health challenges increase the risk of tail-biting. The prevalence of tail damage and health problems show high correlations across batches within and between farms. There are many common risk factors for tail-biting and health problems, notably respiratory, enteric and locomotory diseases. These include suboptimal thermal climate, hygiene, stocking density and feed quality. The prevalence of tail damage and health problems also show high correlations across batches within and between farms. However, limited evidence supports two likely causal mechanisms for a direct link between DB and health problems. The first is that generalized poor health (e.g., enzootic pneumonia) on farm poses an increased risk of pigs performing DB. Recent studies indicate a possible causal link between an experimental inflammation and an increase in DB, and suggest a link between cytokines and tail-biting. The negative effects of poor health on the ingestion and processing of nutrients means that immune-stimulated pigs may develop specific nutrient deficiencies, increasing DB. The second causal mechanism involves tail-biting causing poor health. Indirectly, pathogens enter the body via the tail lesion and once infected, systemic spread of infection may occur. This occurs mainly via the venous route targeting the lungs, and to a lesser extent via cerebrospinal fluid and the lymphatic system. In carcasses with tail lesions, there is an increase in lung lesions, abscessation, arthritis and osteomyelitis. There is also evidence for the direct spread of pathogens between biters and victims. In summary, the literature supports the association between poor health and DB, particularly tail-biting. However, there is insufficient evidence to confirm causality in either direction. Nevertheless, the limited evidence is compelling enough to suggest that improvements to management and housing to enhance pig health will reduce DB. In the same way, improvements to housing and management designed to address DB, are likely to result in benefits to pig health. While most of the available literature relates to tail-biting, we suggest that similar mechanisms are responsible for links between health and other DB.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8828939
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-88289392022-02-11 The Evidence for a Causal Link Between Disease and Damaging Behavior in Pigs Boyle, Laura A. Edwards, Sandra A. Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth Pol, Françoise Šemrov, Manja Zupan Schütze, Sabine Nordgreen, Janicke Bozakova, Nadya Sossidou, Evangelia N. Valros, Anna Front Vet Sci Veterinary Science Damaging behaviors (DB) such as tail and ear biting are prevalent in pig production and reduce welfare and performance. Anecdotal reports suggest that health challenges increase the risk of tail-biting. The prevalence of tail damage and health problems show high correlations across batches within and between farms. There are many common risk factors for tail-biting and health problems, notably respiratory, enteric and locomotory diseases. These include suboptimal thermal climate, hygiene, stocking density and feed quality. The prevalence of tail damage and health problems also show high correlations across batches within and between farms. However, limited evidence supports two likely causal mechanisms for a direct link between DB and health problems. The first is that generalized poor health (e.g., enzootic pneumonia) on farm poses an increased risk of pigs performing DB. Recent studies indicate a possible causal link between an experimental inflammation and an increase in DB, and suggest a link between cytokines and tail-biting. The negative effects of poor health on the ingestion and processing of nutrients means that immune-stimulated pigs may develop specific nutrient deficiencies, increasing DB. The second causal mechanism involves tail-biting causing poor health. Indirectly, pathogens enter the body via the tail lesion and once infected, systemic spread of infection may occur. This occurs mainly via the venous route targeting the lungs, and to a lesser extent via cerebrospinal fluid and the lymphatic system. In carcasses with tail lesions, there is an increase in lung lesions, abscessation, arthritis and osteomyelitis. There is also evidence for the direct spread of pathogens between biters and victims. In summary, the literature supports the association between poor health and DB, particularly tail-biting. However, there is insufficient evidence to confirm causality in either direction. Nevertheless, the limited evidence is compelling enough to suggest that improvements to management and housing to enhance pig health will reduce DB. In the same way, improvements to housing and management designed to address DB, are likely to result in benefits to pig health. While most of the available literature relates to tail-biting, we suggest that similar mechanisms are responsible for links between health and other DB. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-01-27 /pmc/articles/PMC8828939/ /pubmed/35155642 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.771682 Text en Copyright © 2022 Boyle, Edwards, Bolhuis, Pol, Šemrov, Schütze, Nordgreen, Bozakova, Sossidou and Valros. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Veterinary Science
Boyle, Laura A.
Edwards, Sandra A.
Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth
Pol, Françoise
Šemrov, Manja Zupan
Schütze, Sabine
Nordgreen, Janicke
Bozakova, Nadya
Sossidou, Evangelia N.
Valros, Anna
The Evidence for a Causal Link Between Disease and Damaging Behavior in Pigs
title The Evidence for a Causal Link Between Disease and Damaging Behavior in Pigs
title_full The Evidence for a Causal Link Between Disease and Damaging Behavior in Pigs
title_fullStr The Evidence for a Causal Link Between Disease and Damaging Behavior in Pigs
title_full_unstemmed The Evidence for a Causal Link Between Disease and Damaging Behavior in Pigs
title_short The Evidence for a Causal Link Between Disease and Damaging Behavior in Pigs
title_sort evidence for a causal link between disease and damaging behavior in pigs
topic Veterinary Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8828939/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35155642
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.771682
work_keys_str_mv AT boylelauraa theevidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT edwardssandraa theevidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT bolhuisjelizabeth theevidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT polfrancoise theevidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT semrovmanjazupan theevidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT schutzesabine theevidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT nordgreenjanicke theevidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT bozakovanadya theevidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT sossidouevangelian theevidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT valrosanna theevidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT boylelauraa evidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT edwardssandraa evidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT bolhuisjelizabeth evidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT polfrancoise evidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT semrovmanjazupan evidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT schutzesabine evidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT nordgreenjanicke evidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT bozakovanadya evidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT sossidouevangelian evidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs
AT valrosanna evidenceforacausallinkbetweendiseaseanddamagingbehaviorinpigs