Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Improved duplex RT-PCR assay for differential diagnosis of mixed infection of duck hepatitis A virus type 1 and type 3 in ducklings.
- Journal:
- Journal of virological methods
- Year:
- 2013
- Authors:
- Chen, Lin-Lin et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Preventive Veterinary Medicine · China
Plain-English summary
Ducklings can get very sick from a virus called duck hepatitis A, which can spread quickly and be deadly. Researchers in China developed a new test that can tell if ducklings are infected with one type of the virus (DHAV-1 or DHAV-3) or both at the same time. They tested samples from 60 ducklings across several regions and found that more than half of the flocks had mixed infections, while others had just one type of the virus. This new testing method is quick and affordable, making it easier for veterinarians to diagnose these infections in ducklings.
Abstract
Infection with duck hepatitis A virus (DHAV) causes an acute, rapidly spreading, and fatal disease of young ducklings. DHAV type 1 (DHAV-1) and type 3 (DHAV-3) have been identified in China. In this study, a duplex RT-PCR assay was developed to identify DHAV-1 and DHAV-3 with mixed infection. The method was shown to be high specificity and sensitivity. The minimum detection limit of the method has been determined to be 10pg total RNA templates extracted from duck liver samples or 10² copies viral RNA of DHAV-1 and DHAV-3 respectively. Using the method, from 60 clinical liver samples of 26 duckling flocks in Shandong, Guangdong, Sichuan and Henan provinces of China, 15 (57.7%) flocks were identified as mixed infection of DHAV-1 and DHAV-3, and 9 (34.6%) flocks were DHAV-1 or DHAV-3 single infection. Among them, 38.3% (23/60) of duckling samples were detected as mixed infection of DHAV-1 and DHAV-3, and 48.3% (29/60) of samples were DHAV-1 or DHAV-3 single infection. These results indicated that the improved duplex RT-PCR method provides a rapid and cost-effective laboratory differential diagnosis for mixed infection of DHAV-1 and DHAV-3 in ducklings.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23624117/