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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Canine coronavirus vaccine stops infection in dogs after two doses

By Pratelli, A·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2007·Department of Animal Health and Well-being, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: High-cell-passage canine coronavirus vaccine providing sterilising immunity.

Species:
dog
Stomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

Three dogs were vaccinated with a new canine coronavirus vaccine to see if it could protect them from getting sick. After receiving two doses of the vaccine, the vaccinated dogs showed no signs of illness and did not shed the virus when exposed to it, while two unvaccinated dogs developed moderate diarrhea and tested positive for the virus. The results suggest that this vaccine is effective in preventing infection and could provide strong immunity against the disease.

People also search for: dog coronavirus vaccine · symptoms of canine coronavirus · treatment for dog diarrhea

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the ability of a high-cell-passage canine coronavirus vaccine to immunise dogs against challenge with a field isolate of the virus. METHODS: Three dogs that had previously tested seronegative and virus-negative for canine coronavirus were inoculated twice, at 21-day intervals, with the vaccine and kept under observation. Two seronegative and virus-negative dogs served as unvaccinated controls. For safety tests, two additional dogs were inoculated oronasally with 10 times the vaccinal dose and no reactions were observed. Faecal samples were collected daily from the vaccinated dogs after the first and second inoculations. Both vaccinated and control dogs were challenged two weeks after the second vaccination with a field canine coronavirus strain. Blood samples were collected for serological tests before vaccination and at weekly intervals after vaccinations and challenge. RESULTS: Virus was not detected in faecal samples after the first or second vaccinations by virus isolation assays and PCR. Significantly, the vaccinated dogs did not have clinical signs after challenge and no virus shedding was observed. The two unvaccinated control dogs had moderate enteritis, and virus was detected in cell cultures starting from three days postchallenge (dog 1) and two days postchallenge (dog 2), and by PCR for 23 median days. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: This study showed the efficacy of a high-cell-passage canine coronavirus vaccine in preventing infection of dogs by virulent virus and, specifically, its ability to induce sterilising immunity.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17877547/