Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Severe bloody diarrhea outbreak in vaccinated Jack Russell puppies
By Boros, Ákos et al.·Published in Veterinary research communications·2022·Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Unusual "Asian-origin" 2c to 2b point mutant canine parvovirus (Parvoviridae) and canine astrovirus (Astroviridae) co-infection detected in vaccinated dogs with an outbreak of severe haemorrhagic gastroenteritis with high mortality rate in Hungary.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 7-week-old Jack Russell Terrier puppy in Hungary developed severe vomiting and diarrhea due to a serious infection called hemorrhagic gastroenteritis. Despite being vaccinated against canine parvovirus, the puppy was found to be co-infected with both canine parvovirus and canine astrovirus. Unfortunately, this outbreak led to a high number of deaths among affected puppies. The researchers are looking into how these viruses, especially a new strain of parvovirus, may have contributed to the severity of the illness in vaccinated dogs.
People also search for: puppy vomiting diarrhea · Jack Russell Terrier parvovirus treatment · canine gastroenteritis outbreak
Abstract
In this study, the aetiological background of an outbreak of severe haemorrhagic gastroenteritis (HGE) in a colony of purebred Jack Russell Terriers vaccinated against CPV-2 in Hungary was investigated. Canine parvovirus 2 (CPV-2, Parvoviridae) and canine astrovirus (CaAstV, Astroviridae) co-infection was identified by viral metagenomics and next-generation sequencing (VM-NGS) methods from a rectal swab of an affected 7-week-old puppy. The complete coding sequence of CPV-2 strain FR1/CPV2-2021-HUN (ON733252) and the complete genome of CaAstV strain FR1/CaAstV-2021-HUN (ON733251) were determined by VM-NGS and PCR methods. Results of sequence and phylogenetic analyses showed that CPV-2 strain FR1/CPV2-2021-HUN was different from the applied vaccine strains and previously identified strains from Hungary but showed high sequence identity (> 99.8%) and close phylogenetic relationship to recently described "Asian-origin" CPV-2c strains from Italy. But, based on the single amino acid difference on position 426 of VP2 (Glu/Asp) between the study strain and the closest relatives, FR1/CPV2-2021-HUN belonged to the 2b antigenic type rather than 2c. The CaAstV strain FR1/CaAstV-2021-HUN showed close relationship with a CaAstV strain identified previously from a diarrhoeic dog in Hungary. Both viruses were continuously detectable by PCR in additional enteric samples, and the CPV-2 could also be detected in several (n = 32) tissue samples from 9 affected deceased puppies. Further comparative studies are necessary to confirm the role of the point mutation causing the change in the antigenic type of this "Asian-origin" CPV-2 and/or the role of CaAstV co-infection in the development and/or severity of (haemorrhagic) gastroenteritis among dogs vaccinated against CPV-2.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36129562/