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Koi
Herpes Virus - Spring Viremia of Carp - What You Should Know
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The information below is reprinted from Koivet.com
with the owner's
permission.
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Overview |
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Koi are generally hardy fish. They're descended from the common carp and are
tough, essentially omnivorous fish with the ability to withstand a range of
living conditions.
As an
ornamental specimen, the Koi is beautiful, and sought after for it's highly
strained color varieties.
Koi
health and disease is essentially a balancing act or "equilibrium"
created between stocking density, water-and-environmental conditions, parasites,
and the fish itself.
It was
once said that "if you take care of the environment, the fish will take
care of themselves". This was true until some of these viruses started
showing up with increasing regularity.
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Introduction
to the Viruses |
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There are two known viruses of importance to Koi. There are other viruses but
these are important from the perspective that they can quickly kill the
fish and are both highly contagious.
These
viruses are similar and dissimilar. Some of their differences and similarities
are important.
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Spring
Viremia of Carp
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Koi
Herpes Virus
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Recently
Discovered?
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No.
This virus was described in the literature more than forty years ago.
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No.
KHV was reported in Japan fully ten years before it's first
outbreak or discovery in Israel. The earliest documentation I can find
is from the 1980's
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Kills
Fish?
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SVC has
recently been shown to kill groups of fish when experimentally injected
with the virus, earlier researchers maintained that the SVC only
allows opportunistic bacterial infections which then can kill the fish.
Mortalities may be 20-30% if supportive care is given and the
environment is optimized.
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KHV
kills upwards of 70%-90% of exposed fish which have not been previously
exposed to KHV.
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Seasonal
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Yes
- Spring
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Yes
- Spring and Fall
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Endemic
(native) to the USA?
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Yes
and No: The 'party line' is that the virus had not formerly been found
in North America but there is emerging evidence that the virus was
indeed being encountered in fish kills in Wisconsin almost a decade ago.
Reported
"absence" of SVC from American waters may have been due to a
lack of testing. I personally (ELJ) think that SVC is an endemic,
and highly morbid contributor to many of the Springtime die-offs and
illnesses we've seen every year for the past two decades.
The
problem is that testing for SVC can result in quarantine or worse.
Retailers are unlikely to "step up to the plate" and endeavor
to discover this virus and limit its distribution.
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Doubtful.
This KHV virus seems to be infecting "groups" of exposed fish
which go on to infect others, or simply die off en masse. It's own
virulence (aggressiveness) is probably limiting it's morbidity.
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Lesions
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Pale
white lesions may result due to the co-infection by bacteria. Fish may
develop a pink or red color in the skin as infection progresses.
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Yes.
Pale white lesions may appear in the gills of affected fish. Excess
slime, especially on the head and nape of the fish seems common.
Body-color of the fish may become blotchy and the internal organs may be
damaged or even liquefied.
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Diagnostic Challenges
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People
don't want to submit for, nor do some labs want to test for; SVC because
of the maelstrom it causes. SVC is an RNA virus and requires an extra
step when using PCR technology to diagnose it. When the virus is not in
a vulnerable host or is not in its ideal temperature range for
replication, it's diagnosis is essentially impossible.
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The
PCR test and the other culture and swabbing techniques available
are quite accurate for infected fish but false negatives can occur. When
the virus is not in a vulnerable host or is not in its ideal temperature
range for replication, it's diagnosis is essentially impossible.
Diagnosing "occult" (hidden) carrier-states of KHV may be
impossible with current technology.
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Immune
Carrier States?
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Fish
often survive SVC; but their carrier state is unconfirmed.
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Survivors
of KHV are said to be clear of the virus and cannot be re infected with
KHV.
The
lack of virus in post-infection specimens is probably due to the
difficulty in detecting virus in asymptomatic fish or fish outside the
viruses' ideal range.
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Kind
of Virus
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RNA
virus, rhabdo (bullet) shaped.
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DNA
virus. (Herpes virus)
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Testing
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Can
be cultured, there is a reverse PCR test for this virus.
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Can
be cultured, can be detected via novel nucleic acid tests (swabs), can
be detected by PCR testing.
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Reportability
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This
morbid virus is reportable by law.
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This
highly virulent virus is not legally reportable and is as yet
unregulated.
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Prevention
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Prevent
exposure to the virus.
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Prevent
exposure to the virus.
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Control
- Treatment
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SVC:
If fish are supported in ideal environments and secondary infections are
controlled through aggressive antimicrobial therapy, including
antimicrobial food and injections, 70+ percent survival is possible.
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KHV: Mortalities
may be kept below 70% if the fish are rapidly warmed to above 80 Degrees
Fahrenheit.
To
put the brakes on a late-summer outbreak, you can let the temperature
sail down into the forties instead of heating, and the losses will slow
down as the virus is deprived of it's ideal temperature range. Fish may
still die from prior damage done by the virus.
Sooner
or later, the fish will have to be warmed up.
During
an outbreak; if possible you can move the fish as quickly as possible to
temperatures higher than 80 oF, or lower than the seventies
(in Fo)
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Spring
Viremia: |
The real issues concerning SVC are it's status as a reportable virus. It's very
possible that many breeder and wholesale facilities (as well as many
residential ponds) have fish which harbor this virus. Testing is currently
possible, but is not being undertaken on a widespread basis, because of the
cost, the lack of centralized and unified regulation, and a reluctance of
civilians, and researchers to open that "can of worms". Retailers
concerned that their stocks could harbor this virus would put themselves
out of business by soliciting SVC testing by a laboratory and receiving a
positive result .
Fortunately,
SVC isn't a terribly efficient killer of fish and could be considered 'mild' at
least compared to KHV. Well-cared-for fish can often survive the virus not
unlike the way healthy people survive the Influenza virus, and optimally housed
fish may not even break out with signs of infection.
I for one
do not spend much time worrying about the SVC condition because I would neither
subject my customers to diagnosis (and potential persecution caused by an SVC
diagnosis), nor would it change my treatment, which is antimicrobial support
"past" the ravages of the virus . I am, as a healthcare provider to
fish, almost alone with this opinion *.
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KHV |
The real issues concerning KHV is it's predilection for a narrow
temperature range for infection, and it's ability to hide when it's outside
those temperatures in asymptomatic (not sick) fish. If you grind up a
healthy-looking fish which you think might have or be carrying KHV looking for
virus, you can easily miss the diagnosis unless the fish is actually
viremic. When a fish is symptomatic and sick with a KHV infection,
the virus can usually be cultured into certain cell lines, detected by enzyme
linked PCR tests, or even detected by unique nucleic acids in it's structure.
What
it boils down to is this:
If
you're considering buying some nice new fish this Spring, how do you know
the fish isn't just sitting there; ready to explode with KHV as soon as it hits
seventy degrees Fahrenheit?
You don't
have any security unless the fish has been through the following cycle of
cold-then-warm, which are believed to be important triggering events for KHV
infections:
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Stress
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Cold
water,
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Warming,
to the viruses ideal range in the seventies (oF) allowing virus
to replicate and damage the fish.
So, a
fish which has endured, and survived, a temperate (North American) climate
change from winter to summer could be regarded as the safest fish to buy but
does not rule out that the fish could be carrying the virus. Some dealers are
artificially inducing these cold-then-warm cyclic changes in their recent
imports to try and bring these cases out of the woodwork before sale by chilling
and then warming the fish after importation, creating a "mini" cycle.
Testing
for KHV can prove the fish to be without the virus and "not currently
infected" but since the carrier state is a relative "unknown" at
the present time, there is little security in a negative KHV test in a healthy
fish. A negative KHV test in sick fish could be considered much more
reliable as most fish with active infections have virus which is capable of
detection by available means.
Quarantine
will become a necessity, not an ideal, in 2003. This quarantine could arguably
be 8-12 months to allow a complete "cold-warm-cold" cycle in order to
reveal occult KHV or SVC infections.
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An
actual case: |
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KHV
Strategy | The following was used on one of several cases of KHV which broke out in the
Fall of 2002. The fish were being heated despite the onset of wintertime
temperatures outside, to support the fight against what appeared to be a severe
bacterial infection. Then an Arkansas laboratory indicated it was KHV. We had
stopped the losses initially with Tricide Neo but the losses resumed a week
after the Tricide dipping which made us even more suspicious that we were
dealing with a virus. (In quotes, my customer communication)
"Your losses have not been on par with the others, most folks lose 70-90%
of their fish in a week or two. This is not a cause for optimism. It may be
because you used the Tricide Neo it could also be because temps were falling as they broke....
However, now most of the fish *are* symptomatic and as the Arkansas
specialist indicated, you COULD let the heat off and the virus COULD (should?)
go dormant.
In the Spring, here's the possibility: Since most of the fish are showing signs,
it's safe to say they are "viremic". If they are chilled ***RIGHT
NOW*** (today!) - could they not chill down, stop the virus / viremia /
replication, and with warming in the Spring, perhaps mount an immune response???
Yes, it's possible. Researchers I spoke to know that we cannot re infect KHV
survivors. Did they survive the KHV with natural immunity or luck?; or do they
develop specific immunity afterward, from incomplete (non-terminal) infection???
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So, here's my recommendations for Winter
KHV Outbreaks: | 1)
STOP HEATING NOW if the fish have KHV.
2)
STOP the water falls; to prevent the phenomena of "super cooling" from
chilling them too fast.
3)
Maintain mid-water circulation to maintain aeration and to de-gas the pond.
4)
Remove dead as they show up.
5) In the Spring - when the Arkansas
specialist ,
you, and I have talked, we should "accelerate" the heating process. *NOT*
letting them warm up slowly, naturally. We
should do a sort of: "On your mark, get set, go!" and move them as
quickly and safely as possible through the warming process, for example, when
water naturally hits 45-47 oF we could suddenly take them
"5-degrees-per-day" to a whopping, most "KHV-unfriendly"
eighty oF Six day warm up. Window in the seventies: TWO
Crazy? Maybe. Kill all your fish? Not like the virus probably would if
water temperatures were suspended in the seventies..
Finally,
you *do* see the problem with complete disinfection, "depop-repop"
plans. If you sacrifice all your remaining fish, to get new healthy ones;
what on earth will prevent you from restocking with 49 healthy fish and ONE MORE
KHV carrier? Nothing.
So I am not really in favor of a wholesale depopulation at this time.
Best regards
Erik Johnson DVM
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Outcomes |
When the pond was cooled, the losses basically stopped.
The fish became lethargic and went to the bottom. A few of the worst fish which
were about to die when the water was warmer continued to become sicker and died.
Some
other fish were brought inside and rapidly warmed to 80 oF, and made
remarkable recoveries. Spring 2003 is not here as of this writing but there is
some encouragement that if rapidly warmed, these fish may recover.
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Post
Script |
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It
bears mentioning that it is the professional opinion of most researchers and
ornamental fish health specialists in this field, that in the interest of the
health of our nation's Koi and carp livestock, all individuals and
retailers suspecting that their fish might be infected with SVC or KHV should
request testing for these infectious agents.
My (ELJ)
position has been to recommend that retailers and wholesalers decline SVC
testing and to destroy fish which might be infected. This represents
irresponsible behavior on the part of the dealer and puts the hobby at risk
because it will hamper attempts to detect and eliminate the SVC virus.
However, the position is a result of the following:
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If your fish are diagnosed with SVC you will be summarily bankrupted
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following processes currently in place: |
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There
is no financial compensation for lost livestock which may
be tested and slaughtered. You will not be compensated for lost
business-days while under quarantine. Requests to operate under a
new business name with new brood stock and new production ponds
will probably be (and have been) denied.
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No
official process exists to formally determine the length of
impound and quarantine. You may be under quarantine for an
indefinite period of time.
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There
are no mechanisms to protect your identity and you may be
informed of your SVC infection along with the rest of the
industry, simultaneously.
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There
is no standard format, nor standard interval for testing of
your peers or competitors, so you may be the only
organization subjected to the penalties associated with reportable
SVC infections.
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