Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
First detection of feline morbillivirus in cats in South America
By Darold, Gabriela Molinari et al.·Published in Archives of virology·2017·University of Cuiabá, Brazil·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: First report of feline morbillivirus in South America.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of cats in Brazil was tested for a virus called feline morbillivirus, which has been linked to kidney disease in some cases. Researchers found this virus in the urine of cats that showed no signs of urinary problems or kidney disease. This is the first time this virus has been identified in South America, suggesting it may be spreading across the continent. Interestingly, unlike previous studies, this research did not find a clear connection between the virus and kidney disease in the cats tested.
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Abstract
Feline morbillivirus was first identified in healthy and diseased stray cats captured in Hong Kong. Recently, it was demonstrated that the virus circulates within cat populations in Japan, Italy, Germany, and the USA. Importantly, an association between feline morbillivirus infection and chronic kidney disease was suggested by histological analysis of kidney tissue of infected cats. The aim of this study was to verify the presence and examine the genetic diversity of feline morbilliviruses associated with infections of domestic cats in Brazil. Seventeen cats without clinical manifestations of urinary tract diseases from a multi-cat household and 35 random client-owned cats admitted to the Teaching Veterinary Hospital for a variety of reasons were evaluated for paramyxoviral infection and the presence of uropathy. A fragment of the paramyxoviral L gene was amplified from urine samples using a reverse transcription semi-nested PCR assay. For the first time, we detected a feline morbillivirus strain that was genetically related to viral strains previously characterized in Japan in urine samples from cats in South America, in Brazil. This together with the recent description of feline morbillivirus identification within cat populations in the USA, suggests a possible widespread distribution of this viral agent on the American continent. Our data demonstrated feline morbillivirus RNA shedding mostly in the urine of cats without clinical, laboratorial, or ultrasonographic signs of urinary tract diseases. In contrast to previously published findings that associated feline morbillivirus infection with chronic kidney disease, we did not observe a clear relationship between feline morbillivirus RNA shedding in urine and kidney disease in the cats evaluated.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27804021/