Pig World
  • News
      • Animal Health
      • Breeding
      • Business
      • Environment
      • EU
      • Food Safety
      • Housing
      • Marketing
      • NPA
      • National Pig Awards
      • New Products
      • Nutrition
      • People
      • Pig Fair
      • Politics
      • Training & Education
      • Welfare
  • Features
    • Animal Health
    • Breeding
    • Environment
    • Farm Visits
    • Herd Recording
    • Housing
    • Marketing
    • Nutrition
    • Products
    • Training
  • Comment
    • AHDB Pork
    • Chris Fogden
    • Dennis Bridgeford
    • Peter Crichton
    • Red Robin
    • Veterinary View
    • Zoe Davies, NPA
  • Numbers
  • Pig Prices
  • Magazines
    • March 2026
    • 2026 Buildings supplement
    • February 2026
    • 2026 Pig Nutrition supplement
    • January 2026
    • December 2025
    • November 2025
    • 2025 National Pig Awards supplement
    • October 2025
    • September 2025
    • August 2025
    • 2025 Maximising Pig Health supplement
    • July 2025
    • June 2025
    • 2025 Innovation supplement
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • 2025 Buildings supplement
    • February 2025
    • 2025 Nutrition Supplement
    • January 2025
    • December 2024
    • November 2024
    • 2024 National Pig Awards supplement
    • October 2024
    • September 2024
    • August 2024
    • 2024 Pig Health supplement
    • July 2024
    • June 2024
    • 2024 Innovation supplement
    • 2024 Pig & Poultry Fair Guide
    • May 2024
    • April 2024
    • 2024 Buildings Supplement
    • March 2024
    • 2024 Pig Nutrition supplement
    • February 2024
    • January 2024
    • December 2023
    • November 2023
    • 2023 National Pig Awards supplement
    • October 2023
    • September 2023
    • Health Supplement
  • Suppliers
  • Jobs
    • Browse Jobs
    • Post a Job
    • Manage Jobs
  • Classified
  • Events
    • Pigs Tomorrow
    • National Pig Awards
Subscribe
Pig WorldPig World
  • News
      • Animal Health
      • Breeding
      • Business
      • Environment
      • EU
      • Food Safety
      • Housing
      • Marketing
      • NPA
      • National Pig Awards
      • New Products
      • Nutrition
      • People
      • Pig Fair
      • Politics
      • Training & Education
      • Welfare
  • Features
    • Animal Health
    • Breeding
    • Environment
    • Farm Visits
    • Herd Recording
    • Housing
    • Marketing
    • Nutrition
    • Products
    • Training
  • Comment
    • AHDB Pork
    • Chris Fogden
    • Dennis Bridgeford
    • Peter Crichton
    • Red Robin
    • Veterinary View
    • Zoe Davies, NPA
  • Numbers
  • Pig Prices
  • Magazines
    1. March 2026
    2. 2026 Buildings supplement
    3. February 2026
    4. 2026 Pig Nutrition supplement
    5. January 2026
    6. December 2025
    7. November 2025
    8. 2025 National Pig Awards supplement
    9. October 2025
    10. September 2025
    11. August 2025
    12. 2025 Maximising Pig Health supplement
    13. July 2025
    14. June 2025
    15. 2025 Innovation supplement
    16. May 2025
    17. April 2025
    18. March 2025
    19. 2025 Buildings supplement
    20. February 2025
    21. 2025 Nutrition Supplement
    22. January 2025
    23. December 2024
    24. November 2024
    25. 2024 National Pig Awards supplement
    26. October 2024
    27. September 2024
    28. August 2024
    29. 2024 Pig Health supplement
    30. July 2024
    31. June 2024
    32. 2024 Innovation supplement
    33. 2024 Pig & Poultry Fair Guide
    34. May 2024
    35. April 2024
    36. 2024 Buildings Supplement
    37. March 2024
    38. 2024 Pig Nutrition supplement
    39. February 2024
    40. January 2024
    41. December 2023
    42. November 2023
    43. 2023 National Pig Awards supplement
    44. October 2023
    45. September 2023
    46. Health Supplement
    Featured

    March 2026 issue of Pig World now available

    March 2, 2026
    Recent

    March 2026 issue of Pig World now available

    March 2, 2026

    2026 Buildings supplement now available

    March 2, 2026

    February 2026 issue of Pig World now available

    February 3, 2026
  • Suppliers
  • Jobs
    • Browse Jobs
    • Post a Job
    • Manage Jobs
  • Classified
  • Events
    • Pigs Tomorrow
    • National Pig Awards
LinkedIn X (Twitter)
Pig World
Comment

Vet View: Why porcine ear necrosis deserves renewed attention

Joseph LuntBy Joseph LuntFebruary 10, 20264 Mins Read
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
Ear-tip necrosis
Ear-tip necrosis is a familiar but challenging condition in nursery and early grower pigs © Joseph Lunt

Porcine ear necrosis (PEN), often referred to as ear-tip necrosis, is a familiar but challenging condition in nursery and early grower pigs.

Lesions usually begin as redness and swelling at the ear tip and can progress to scabbing, necrosis and, in severe cases, loss of part of the ear.

Although recognised for decades, uncertainty around the cause of PEN has limited effective prevention, with most control efforts focusing on managing risk factors rather than stopping the disease itself.

New research has now provided the clearest evidence to date that PEN has a specific infectious cause, helping to explain its behaviour on farm and offering a clearer direction for control.

Long-standing problem

PEN has traditionally been viewed as a multifactorial syndrome. Environmental factors such as stocking density, ventilation, humidity and flooring have all been associated with outbreaks.

Behaviour, particularly ear biting and oral manipulation, is also consistently linked to lesion development. Various infectious agents, including Staphylococcus hyicus (the cause of greasy pig) and porcine circovirus type 2, have been proposed as possible causes, but none had been conclusively shown to induce PEN on their own under controlled conditions.

As a result, outbreaks can still occur on well-managed units, often appearing suddenly and spreading, despite improvements in housing or management.

A recently published controlled study has moved understanding of PEN forward significantly. In the trial, healthy five-week-old pigs from a farm with no history of ear necrosis were experimentally challenged using pure cultures of bacteria isolated from field cases.

Pigs inoculated with S. hyicus did not develop lesions, despite the strain carrying genes associated with skin disease. In contrast, pigs inoculated intradermally in the ear with Fusobacterium necrophorum developed lesions clinically indistinguishable from PEN, including tissue necrosis and loss of part of the ear. The bug was recovered from affected ears, while non-infected pigs in the group remained lesion-free.

This is the first time PEN has been reliably reproduced using a single bug in controlled conditions, strongly implicating F. necrophorum as a key cause of the disease.

F. necrophorum  is well known for causing necrotic conditions in livestock, including foot-rot and liver abscesses in cattle.

Importantly, it is also a normal inhabitant of the pig’s gastrointestinal tract and oral cavity, meaning it is already widespread on pig units.

The bacterium produces several factors that damage tissue and disrupt blood vessels. Once the skin barrier is broken – for example, through ear biting – F. necrophorum appears able to establish a local infection that compromises blood supply, leading to progressive tissue death.

This helps explain why PEN lesions typically begin at the ear tip and worsen gradually rather than presenting as sudden systemic disease.

Rethinking how PEN develops

These findings support an ‘outside-in’ model of disease. PEN is likely initiated when damaged ear skin becomes contaminated with F. necrophorum, often through normal pig behaviour.

Repeated biting or manipulation may act as repeated infection events, increasing lesion severity and the risk of tissue loss.

This does not reduce the importance of environment or management. Instead, it reinforces their role in creating conditions that allow infection to take hold.

While this research does not yet provide a vaccine or targeted treatment, it sharpens the focus of prevention. Measures that reduce ear damage – including good stocking density, environmental enrichment, careful management around weaning and good air quality – are likely to reduce the opportunity for F. necrophorum to enter through the skin.

Crucially, PEN should be viewed not just as a behavioural or cosmetic issue, but as an infectious disease with clear welfare implications.

Porcine ear necrosis is painful, raises welfare concerns and may negatively affect growth performance. By demonstrating a causal role for F. necrophorum, this work provides a solid foundation for improved prevention strategies.

Further research will be needed to refine control measures under commercial conditions, but the key message is clear: PEN is no longer simply a vague, multifactorial problem – it is increasingly a defined infectious disease, and that understanding is an important step forward for the pig industry.

Share. LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Email
Previous ArticleDebbie Wilson to stand down as Ladies in Pigs chair
Next Article Net pig margins drop back in Q4
Joseph Lunt

Joseph Lunt, the 2024 Young Vet of the Year, works at Garth Pig Practice as a vet. Working in the industry since graduating in 2016, he has experience in indoor and outdoor pigs, with a special interest in animal nutrition, in which he has gained post-graduate qualifications at SRUC

Read Similar Stories

Comment: Meet AHDB’s customer services team

March 6, 2026

Comment: Valuable engagement in Brussels on some of our hottest topics

March 5, 2026

Comment: Why am I hiding? Time to step forward, rather than back

January 9, 2026
Latest News

Departing NPA chair praised for ‘strong and credible’ leadership

March 27, 2026

Ensus plant to re-open, as government responds to concerns over impact of war on CO2 supplies

March 26, 2026

GB pig prices for week ending March 21, 2026 – another big fall for the SPP

March 25, 2026
Sponsored Content

Serious about pig welfare? So are we

October 16, 2025

All Vaccines Are Not Equal

September 15, 2025
Current Pig Industry jobs
  • General Farm Assistant – Ref 1862 Essex

    • Essex
    • Roadhogs Recruitment Ltd.
    • Full Time
  • Pig Stockperson – Ref 1861 Norfolk

    • Norfolk
    • Roadhogs Recruitment Ltd.
    • Full Time
  • Fields Person – Ref 1860 North Yorkshire

    • North Yorkshire
    • Roadhogs Recruitment Ltd.
    • Full Time
GETTING IN TOUCH
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Meet The Editors
  • About Us
  • Email Newsletters
  • Subscribe
  • Reuse permissions
OUR SOCIAL CHANNELS
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
PARTNER EVENTS
RELATED SITES
  • Farmers Weekly
  • Agronomist & Arable Farmer
  • Farm Contractor
  • National Pig Awards
  • Pigs Tomorrow
  • Poultry News
  • Weekly Tribune
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
© 2024 MA Agriculture Ltd, a Mark Allen Group company

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.