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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Fatal louping-ill virus infection in a Border collie dog brain

By Dagleish, M P et al.·Published in Journal of comparative pathology·2018·Moredun Research Institute, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A Fatal Case of Louping-ill in a Dog: Immunolocalization and Full Genome Sequencing of the Virus.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old male Border Collie was diagnosed with a severe case of louping-ill, a viral infection that can cause brain inflammation. The dog showed no visible signs of illness, but tests revealed significant damage in the central nervous system. Unfortunately, the infection was fatal, and it was found that the virus affecting the dog was very similar to strains found in sheep. This case highlights that dogs can get louping-ill from sheep-associated viruses, especially as ticks become more common, suggesting the need for a vaccine for dogs in the future.

People also search for: dog louping-ill symptoms · Border Collie brain infection · tick-borne diseases in dogs

Abstract

Louping-ill (LI), caused by louping-ill virus (LIV), results in a frequently fatal encephalitis primarily affecting sheep and red grouse (Lagopus lagopus scotica), but it does occur in other species. An adult male Border collie dog was definitively diagnosed with fatal LI and the lesion profile, LIV antigen distribution and full genome sequence of the LIV responsible were investigated to determine if this differed significantly from sheep-derived LIV. No gross lesions were present. The histological lesions were confined to the central nervous system and comprised of lymphocytic perivascular cuffs, glial foci, neuronal necrosis and neuronophagia. Immunolocalization of viral antigen showed small amounts present in neurons only. These histological and immunohistochemical findings were similar to those reported in affected sheep. Compared with published full genome sequences of sheep-derived LIV, only very minor differences were present and phylogenetically the virus clustered individually between a subclade containing Scottish strains, LIV 369/T2 and G and another subclade containing an English isolate LIV A. The LIV isolated from the dog shares a common progenitor with LIV A. These findings suggest there is no canine-specific LIV strain, dogs are susceptible to sheep-associated strains of LI and with the increase in tick prevalence, and therefore exposure to LIV, a safe, effective vaccine for dogs may be required.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30502792/