Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Carnivore chaphamaparvovirus-1 infection in dogs with diarrhea
By Piewbang, Chutchai et al.·Published in The veterinary quarterly·2023·Department of Pathology·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Carnivore chaphamaparvovirus-1 (CaChPV-1) infection in diarrheic dogs reveals viral endotheliotropism in intestine and lung.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of puppies with diarrhea was found to have an infection caused by a virus called carnivore chaphamaparvovirus-1 (CaChPV-1). In a study of 305 dogs, the virus was detected in about 6.5% of them, with a significant number being puppies showing symptoms of diarrhea. The virus was mainly found in the intestinal and lung tissues of these puppies. While the exact role of CaChPV-1 in causing diarrhea is still unclear, this research suggests it could be linked to intestinal issues in dogs.
People also search for: puppy diarrhea causes · dog viral infections · carnivore chaphamaparvovirus treatment
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Carnivore chaphamaparvovirus-1 (CaChPV-1) is a parvovirus identified in dogs and association of infection with diarrhea is controversial. Information on whether tissue tropism persists is lacking. OBJECTIVES: To determine the disease association of CaChPV-1 in dogs with diarrhea and to investigate viral tropism and genetic diversity. ANIMALS AND METHODS: CaChPV-1 infection was investigated in five recently deceased puppies and designed a retrospective study to determine whether the presence of CaChPV-1 is associated with diarrhea. The retrospective study was conducted in 137 intestinal tissue samples and 168 fecal samples obtained from 305 dogs. CaChPV-1 tissue localization was determined usinghybridization, and CaChPV-1 complete genomes obtained from dead puppies and retrospective study were sequenced and analyzed. RESULTS: CaChPV-1 was detected in 6.56% (20/305) of tested dogs, including 14 diarrheic- and 6 non-diarrheic dogs, and was significant in puppies with diarrhea ( = 0.048). Among the CaChPV-1-positive diarrheic dogs, one sample was obtained from intestinal tissue and 13 samples were fecal samples. However, six CaChPV-1 positive non-diarrheic dogs were based on fecal samples but not on intestinal tissue. Within the age range, the presence of CaChPV-1 was significant in puppies ( < 0.00001) and was mainly localized in the stromal and endothelial cells of intestinal villi and pulmonary alveoli. Phylogenetic analysis indicated genetic diversity of CaChPV-1 Thai strains that were mostly clustered within the sequences found in China. CONCLUSIONS: Although definitive pathogenesis of CaChPV-1 remains undetermined, this study provides evidence supporting that CaChPV-1 localizes in canine cells and could play a potential role as an enteric pathogen.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36846895/