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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Vesivirus linked to deadly hemorrhagic gut disease in dogs 2015

By Renshaw, Randall W et al.·Published in Journal of clinical microbiology·2018·Department of Population Medicine and Diagnostic Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Characterization of a Vesivirus Associated with an Outbreak of Acute Hemorrhagic Gastroenteritis in Domestic Dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

In a 2015 outbreak, eleven dogs developed severe vomiting and bloody diarrhea, known as hemorrhagic gastroenteritis, after staying at a pet housing facility. Despite aggressive treatment, four of the dogs sadly died. Tests revealed that a newly identified virus, a type of vesivirus, was responsible for the illness, causing damage to blood vessels and leading to severe intestinal and brain issues in some dogs. This case highlights a serious and unusual strain of vesivirus in dogs that could pose future risks.

People also search for: dog vomiting bloody diarrhea · hemorrhagic gastroenteritis in dogs · vesivirus outbreak in dogs

Abstract

Four of eleven affected dogs died despite aggressive treatment during a 2015 focal outbreak of hemorrhagic gastroenteritis following a stay in a pet housing facility. Routine diagnostic investigations failed to identify a specific cause. Virus isolation from fresh necropsy tissues yielded a calicivirus with sequence homology to a vesivirus within the group colloquially known as the vesivirus 2117 strains that were originally identified as contaminants in CHO cell bioreactors.hybridization and reverse transcription-PCR assays of tissues from the four deceased dogs confirmed the presence of canine vesivirus (CaVV) nucleic acids that localized to endothelial cells of arterial and capillary blood vessels. CaVV nucleic acid corresponded to areas of necrosis and hemorrhage primarily in the intestinal tract, but also in the brain of one dog with nonsuppurative meningoencephalitis. This is the first report of an atypical disease association with a putative hypervirulent vesivirus strain in dogs, as all other known strains of CaVV appear to cause nonclinical infections or relatively mild disease. After identification of the CU-296 vesivirus strain from this outbreak, four additional CaVV strains were amplified from unrelated fecal specimens and archived stocks provided by other laboratories. Broader questions include the origins, reservoir(s), and potential for reemergence and spread of these related CaVVs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29444830/