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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How feline enteric coronavirus infects and spreads in cats

By Pedersen, Niels C et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2008·Department of Medicine and Epidemiology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Pathogenesis of feline enteric coronavirus infection.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 51 cats, ranging from 10 weeks to 13 years old, were infected with a virus called feline enteric coronavirus (FECV), which spreads through feces. Some cats showed mild diarrhea, while others had no symptoms at all. The study found that kittens were more likely to shed the virus in their feces than older cats, with shedding lasting from 2 to 10 months. Interestingly, some cats shed the virus continuously, while others had periods of shedding and non-shedding. Treatments like methylprednisolone acetate did not change the shedding patterns in these cats. Overall, the findings suggest that while many cats can shed the virus, the severity and duration of shedding can vary widely.

Abstract

Fifty-one specific pathogen-free (SPF) cats 10 weeks to 13 years of age were infected with a cat-to-cat fecal-oral passed strain of feline enteric coronavirus (FECV). Clinical signs ranged from unapparent to a mild and self-limiting diarrhea. Twenty-nine of these cats were FECV naïve before infection and followed sequentially for fecal virus shedding and antibody responses over a period of 8-48 months. Fecal shedding, as determined by real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) from rectal swabs, appeared within a week and was significantly higher in kittens than older cats. FECV shedding remained at high levels for 2-10 months before eventually evolving into one of three excretion patterns. Eleven cats shed the virus persistently at varying levels over an observation period of 9-24 months. Eleven cats appeared to have periods of virus shedding interlaced with periods of non-shedding (intermittent or recurrent shedders), and seven cats ceased shedding after 5-19 months (average 12 months). There was no change in the patterns of virus shedding among cats that were excreting FECV at the time of a secondary challenge exposure. Four cats, which had ceased shedding, re-manifested a primary type infection when secondarily infected. Cats with higher feline coronavirus (FCoV) antibody titers were significantly more likely to shed virus, while cats with lower titers were significantly less likely to be shedding. Twenty-two kittens born to experimentally infected project queens began shedding virus spontaneously, but never before 9-10 weeks of age. Natural kittenhood infections appeared to be low grade and abortive. However, a characteristic primary type infection occurred following experimental infection with FECV at 12-15 weeks of age. Pregnancy, parturition and lactation had no influence on fecal shedding by queens. Methylprednisolone acetate treatment did not induce non-shedders to shed and shedders to increase shedding.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18538604/