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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Parvovirus linked to heart inflammation and scarring in young dogs

By Ford, Jordan et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2017·1 Department of Biomedical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Parvovirus Infection Is Associated With Myocarditis and Myocardial Fibrosis in Young Dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A young dog under 2 years old was found to have heart problems due to a parvovirus infection, which can cause serious inflammation and damage to the heart muscle. Researchers discovered that this virus was present in the heart tissue of several affected puppies, indicating that even vaccinated dogs can still suffer from heart issues related to parvovirus. The study showed that the virus can lead to myocarditis (inflammation of the heart) and fibrosis (scarring), which can be severe in some cases. This highlights the importance of monitoring young dogs for heart problems, even if they have been vaccinated against parvovirus.

People also search for: puppy heart problems · parvovirus vaccination effects · young dog myocarditis symptoms

Abstract

Perinatal parvoviral infection causes necrotizing myocarditis in puppies, which results in acute high mortality or progressive cardiac injury. While widespread vaccination has dramatically curtailed the epidemic of canine parvoviral myocarditis, we hypothesized that canine parvovirus 2 (CPV-2) myocardial infection is an underrecognized cause of myocarditis, cardiac damage, and/or repair by fibrosis in young dogs. In this retrospective study, DNA was extracted from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues from 40 cases and 41 control dogs under 2 years of age from 2007 to 2015. Cases had a diagnosis of myocardial necrosis, inflammation, or fibrosis, while age-matched controls lacked myocardial lesions. Conventional polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and sequencing targeting the VP1 to VP2 region detected CPV-2 in 12 of 40 cases (30%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 18%-45%) and 2 of 41 controls (5%; 95% CI, 0.1%-16%). Detection of CPV-2 DNA in the myocardium was significantly associated with myocardial lesions ( P = .003). Reverse transcription quantitative PCR amplifying VP2 identified viral messenger RNA in 12 of 12 PCR-positive cases and 2 of 2 controls. PCR results were confirmed by in situ hybridization, which identified parvoviral DNA in cardiomyocytes and occasionally macrophages of juvenile and young adult dogs (median age 61 days). Myocardial CPV-2 was identified in juveniles with minimal myocarditis and CPV-2 enteritis, which may indicate a longer window of cardiac susceptibility to myocarditis than previously reported. CPV-2 was also detected in dogs with severe myocardial fibrosis with in situ hybridization signal localized to cardiomyocytes, suggesting prior myocardial damage by CPV-2. Despite the frequency of vaccination, these findings suggest that CPV-2 remains an important cause of myocardial damage in dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28812526/