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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Parvovirus infection in vaccinated dogs and what strains cause it

By Miranda, C. & Thompson, G.·Published in Veterinary Record·2016·Department of Veterinary Clinics Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas de Abel Salazar (ICBAS), Universidade do Porto Porto 4050‐313 Portugal·View original on Crossref

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Original publication title: Canine parvovirus in vaccinated dogs: a field study

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of vaccinated dogs developed symptoms of parvovirus, which is a serious viral infection that can cause severe gastrointestinal issues. Out of 78 dogs tested, 50 were found to have the virus despite being vaccinated. The study noted that older female dogs were more likely to be affected, and the infections often occurred shortly after vaccination. This suggests that the current vaccines may not be fully effective against some circulating strains of the virus. Pet owners should discuss with their veterinarian whether adjustments to vaccination protocols are necessary for better protection against parvovirus.

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Abstract

The authors report a field study that investigated the canine parvovirus (CPV) strains present in dogs that developed the disease after being vaccinated. Faecal samples of 78 dogs that have been vaccinated against CPV and later presented with clinical signs suspected of parvovirus infection were used. Fifty (64.1 per cent) samples tested positive by PCR for CPV. No CPV vaccine type was detected. The disease by CPV‐2b occurred in older and female dogs when compared with that by CPV‐2c. The clinical signs presented by infected dogs were similar when any of both variants were involved. In most cases of disease, the resulting infection by field variants occurred shortly after CPV vaccination. Two dogs that had been subjected to a complete vaccination schedule and presented with clinical signs after 10 days of vaccination, had the CPV‐2c variant associated. The phylogenetic studies showed a close relationship of the isolates in vaccinated dogs to European field strains. Despite the limited sample size in this study, the findings point to the significance of the continuous molecular typing of the virus as a tool to monitor the prevalent circulating CPV strains and access the efficacy of current vaccines. Adjustments on the vaccine types to be used may have to be evaluated again according to each epidemiological situation in order to achieve the dog's optimal immune protection against CPV.

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Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1136/vr.103508