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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Systemic disease and low white cells in young dogs

By Decaro, Nicola et al.·Published in Veterinary microbiology·2008·Department of Animal Health and Well-being, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Experimental infection of dogs with a novel strain of canine coronavirus causing systemic disease and lymphopenia.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of young puppies, aged 2.5 to 6 months, were infected with a new strain of canine coronavirus that caused serious illness and a drop in white blood cells. Over 21 days, the puppies showed severe symptoms similar to those seen in natural infections. Unfortunately, two of the youngest puppies had to be euthanized due to the severity of their condition, while the others gradually improved and fully recovered. This study highlights the dangers of this new coronavirus strain in dogs, which can lead to severe disease and even death.

People also search for: puppy coronavirus symptoms · dog lymphopenia treatment · canine coronavirus recovery

Abstract

A pantropic canine coronavirus (CCoV) strain (CB/05) has been recently associated to a fatal outbreak of systemic disease in young dogs. We report the clinical, virological and serological findings in dogs experimentally infected with strain CB/05. The dogs, three 2.5-month-old and two 6-month-old pups, were successfully infected, shedding viral RNA with their faeces for the entire observation period (21 days) and displaying systemic clinical signs resembling those observed during the course of natural infection. Leucopenia (acute lymphopenia) occurred in all infected dogs, with values dropping below 60% of the initial counts. Considering the severity of the CB/05-induced disease, two of the youngest pups were euthanized for ethical reasons at days 8-9 postinfection, whereas the other pups underwent a slow but progressive improvement of their clinical status with complete recovery. At postmortem examination, remarkable lesions were observed in the internal organs of the euthanized pups, that tested positive for CCoV by real-time RT-PCR and virus isolation on cell cultures. All pups seroconverted for CCoV, as shown by the high optical density values and antibody titres detected by ELISA and virusneutralisation tests, respectively. The present study confirms that strain CB/05 is highly pathogenic for dogs, being able to induce a severe disease (and in some cases the death) even in experimental conditions.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18031959/