Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Reptarenavirus infection found in healthy snakes at Australian zoo
By Hyndman, T H et al.·Published in Australian veterinary journal·2019·School of Veterinary Medicine, Australia·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Reptarenaviruses in apparently healthy snakes in an Australian zoological collection.
- Species:
- reptile
Plain-English summary
A reticulated python was brought in for open-mouth breathing and had red, inflamed areas in its mouth. Testing revealed that the python had a reptarenavirus, which is linked to a disease called inclusion body disease (IBD) in snakes. Interestingly, while this python showed symptoms, the other 35 snakes tested, including pythons, a corn snake, and a Madagascar tree boa, remained healthy despite also testing positive for the virus. The python's condition improved on its own without any treatment, suggesting that not all infected snakes will show signs of illness.
People also search for: python open-mouth breathing · snake respiratory infection · reptarenavirus in snakes · inclusion body disease in pythons · healthy snakes with reptarenavirus
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inclusion body disease (IBD) is a disease of snakes with a global distribution and has recently been shown to be caused by reptarenaviruses. Testing for this group of viruses in asymptomatic snakes allows the association between infection and disease to be further elucidated. METHODS: A reptarenavirus was detected by RT-PCR in a reticulated python (Malayopython reticulatus) from an Australian zoological collection that was open-mouth breathing and had erythematous oral mucosa. Another 27 pythons, 4 elapids, 2 colubrids and 2 boas from this collection were then screened. From these animals, swabs, whole blood and/or tissue were tested for reptarenaviruses by RT-PCR. Additionally, blood films from 10 snakes were examined by light microscopy for the presence of inclusion bodies. The majority of samples were collected over a 484-day period. RESULTS: A total of 8 animals were RT-PCR-positive (8/36 = 22.2%): 6 were pythons, 1 was a corn snake (Pantherophis guttatus) and 1 was a Madagascar tree boa (Sanzinia madagascariensis). From them, 57 samples were collected, but only one from each animal was RT-PCR-positive (8/57 = 14.0%). From all 36 animals in this study, 8/182 samples were RT-PCR-positive (4.4%). Inclusion bodies were not recognised in any of the blood films. Only the reticulated python showed signs of illness, which improved without any further intervention. All other RT-PCR-positive snakes were apparently healthy throughout the duration of the study. CONCLUSION: This study showed a weak association between the presence of reptarenaviruses and disease. Testing serially collected swab and whole-blood samples increased the number of animals in which reptarenaviruses were detected.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30919443/