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Fatal Canid Herpesvirus 1 Respiratory Infections in 4 Clinically Healthy Adult Dogs

Authors :
Elizabeth A. Driskell
Sherry Blackmon
K. Jia
A. J. Cooley
Xiu-Feng Wan
Jeremiah T. Saliki
Paula M. Krimer
Elizabeth W. Uhl
Susan Sanchez
Robert J. Hogan
Shyamesh Kumar
Source :
Veterinary Pathology. 52:681-687
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2014.

Abstract

Four healthy adult dogs (Golden Retrievers aged 6 years and 9 years, Dalmatian aged 13 years, and Mastiff aged 5 years) developed clinical signs of acute respiratory disease and died within 2 to 7 days of onset of clinical signs. The lungs of the 3 dogs submitted for necropsy were diffusely and severely reddened due to hyperemia and hemorrhage. Microscopic lesions in all dogs were suggestive of acute viral or toxic respiratory damage and varied from acute severe fibrinonecrotic or hemorrhagic bronchopneumonia to fibrinous or necrotizing bronchointerstitial pneumonia. Necropsied dogs also had hemorrhagic rhinitis and tracheitis with necrosis. Virus isolation, transmission electron microscopy, and polymerase chain reaction were used to confirm the presence of canid herpesvirus 1 (CaHV-1) in the lung samples of these dogs. Lung tissues were negative for influenza A virus, canine distemper virus, canine parainfluenza virus, canine respiratory coronavirus, and canine adenovirus 2. Canid herpesvirus 1 has been isolated from cases of acute infectious respiratory disease in dogs but has only rarely been associated with fatal primary viral pneumonia in adult dogs. The cases in the current report document lesions observed in association with CaHV-1 in 4 cases of fatal canine herpesvirus pneumonia in adult dogs.

Details

ISSN :
15442217 and 03009858
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Veterinary Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....73710c56e628c3f7c57e6503d7d4888e