Hereditary congenital diseases in pigs
Abstract
Congenital diseases are defined as physical or functional defects, which are present at birth. Although the incidence of congenital disorders is quite low, it is a significant problem in the pig industry. These defects have a serious impact on animal welfare and induce economic losses due to carcass depreciation. Congenital diseases are various but the most common defects occurring in piglets are urogenital diseases (scrotal or inguinal hernias, cryptorchidism, and intersexuality). Defects can arise from nutritional, environmental, management causes, as well as hereditary. Recently the developed genomics tools enable large scale, genome wide association studies to identify chromosomal regions containing causal genes. Identification of causal mutations became a priority to propose new selection schemes. The aim of this article is to present an overview of genetic knowledge on the most frequent congenital diseases in pigs, and the strategies implemented to manage these defects in selection.
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