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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Prednisolone triggers recurring eye disease from herpesvirus in adult

By Ledbetter, Eric C et al.·Published in Veterinary microbiology·2009·Cornell University, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Experimental reactivation of latent canine herpesvirus-1 and induction of recurrent ocular disease in adult dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of adult beagle dogs with a hidden infection of canine herpesvirus-1 (CHV-1) developed eye problems after being given a steroid medication called prednisolone. About 83% of the dogs that received the medication showed symptoms like conjunctivitis (eye inflammation) and keratitis (corneal inflammation) within a couple of weeks. In contrast, the dogs that did not have the virus or received a placebo did not experience any eye issues. This suggests that giving prednisolone to dogs with a latent CHV-1 infection can trigger a reactivation of the virus and lead to eye problems.

People also search for: dog eye problems herpesvirus · beagle conjunctivitis treatment · prednisolone side effects in dogs

Abstract

Latent canine herpesvirus-1 (CHV-1) infection is common in domestic dogs, but recrudescent CHV-1 diseases are poorly characterized. To determine if administration of an immunosuppressive dosage of prednisolone to adult dogs latently infected with CHV-1 results in recurrent ocular disease, adult beagles with and without experimentally induced CHV-1 latent infection were divided into groups: group 1 latently infected and administered prednisolone, group 2 latently infected and administered placebo, and group 3 not latently infected and administered prednisolone. Prednisolone (3.0 mg/kg/day) was administered to dogs in groups 1 and 3 for seven consecutive days beginning on study day 1. Samples for CHV-1 polymerase chain reaction and serum neutralization (SN) assays were collected, and physical, ophthalmologic, and in vivo ocular confocal microscopic examinations were performed at intervals for 42 days. Bilateral ocular disease (i.e., conjunctivitis or keratitis) was detected in 83% of group 1 dogs between study days 3 and 18. In vivo confocal microscopic abnormalities included conjunctival leukocyte infiltration and corneal leukocyte infiltration, abnormal epithelial cell morphology, and Langerhans cell infiltration. Ocular viral shedding was detected in 50% of group 1 dogs on study days 10 and 13. Fourfold elevations in CHV-1 SN titers were detected in 100% of group 1 dogs by study day 14. Dogs in control groups did not develop clinical ocular disease (P<0.05), CHV-1 titer elevations (P<0.005), or viral shedding. Administration of an immunosuppressive dosage of systemic prednisolone to adult dogs latently infected with CHV-1 may result in viral reactivation and ocular disease recrudescence.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19345521/