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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Canine distemper virus infection affecting dog footpads

By Gröne, Andrea et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2004·Institut f&#xfc, Germany·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Canine distemper virus infection of canine footpad epidermis.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs infected with canine distemper virus (CDV) showed signs of infection in their footpads. In a study, seven dogs with severe distemper had viral particles detected in their footpad skin, while other dogs either had mild distemper or were not infected at all. The infected dogs had more immune cells and signs of cell death in their footpad skin compared to the others. This suggests that CDV can persist in the footpad skin without causing significant damage.

People also search for: dog footpad infection distemper · canine distemper symptoms · treatment for dog footpad issues

Abstract

Infection of the footpad epidermis can occur in natural canine distemper virus (CDV) infection of dogs. Footpads from 19 dogs experimentally inoculated with virulent distemper strain A75/17 and from two nonexposed dogs were examined histopathologically and assessed for the presence of viral antigen and nucleoprotein mRNA, as well as number of inflammatory and apoptotic cells. Dogs were divided into four groups based on inoculation status and postmortem examination: inoculated dogs with severe distemper (group 1, n = 7); inoculated dogs with mild distemper (group 2, n = 4); inoculated dogs without distemper (group 3, n = 8); and noninoculated dogs (group 4, n = 2). Footpads from dogs of all groups had a comparably thick epidermis. Eosinophilic viral inclusions and syncytial cells were present in footpad epidermis of one dog of group 1. Footpads of group 1 dogs contained viral antigen and mRNA in the epidermis with strongest staining in a subcorneal location. Additionally, in these dogs footpad dermal structures including eccrine glands and vascular walls were positive for virus particles. No CDV antigen or mRNA was present in the footpad epidermis and dermis of any other dog. Group 1 dogs had more CD3-positive cells and apoptotic cells within the basal layer of the epidermis when compared to the other groups. These findings demonstrate that in experimental infection CDV antigen and mRNA were colocalized in all layers of the infected canine footpad epidermis. The scarcity of overt pathological reactions with absence of keratinocyte degeneration indicates a noncytocidal persisting infection of footpad keratinocytes by CDV.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15214952/