Marek’s disease, highly contagious, often fatal malignancy of chickens that affects the nerves and visceral organs and that is caused by a herpesvirus. The classic sign of the disease is lameness in one or both legs that progresses to paralysis; drooping of the wings may also be noted. In young birds (six to eight weeks of age) predominant signs may be loss of appetite, depression, and sometimes tumours of internal organs and tissue that can be felt under the skin. The disease is named for Jozef Marek, a Hungarian physician who in 1907 described signs of this disease in his backyard roosters. The specific cause of the disease was not established until 1967. Exposure of healthy chickens to airborne dust or dander from infected chicken is an effective means of transmission. Examination of infected birds after death reveals nerves that may be as much as three times their normal thicknesses and lymphoid tumours in various organs. Control is primarily by vaccination, which has resulted in a dramatic reduction in losses from this disease in flocks raised for consumption and egg laying. This control method represents the first successful use of an antiviral vaccine to prevent a naturally occurring malignancy. There is no evidence that the disease is a human health hazard.