44. Feline calicivirus infections. Flashcards

1
Q

Causative agent?

A

Causative agent:

  • Feline calicivirus (FCV), Vesivirus (can culture!)
  • Susceptibility: domestic cat & other felids (i.e. cheetah), marine mammals, (dog)
  • Mother cats can infect kittens with grooming (saliva spread)
  • Resistance: survival in the environment for weeks (shelters); bleach 1:32 inactivates, resistant to
  • detergents
  • One serotype, but antigenic variants (maybe vax not effective towards all strains, esp highly
  • pathogenic)
  • Significant variance in virulence ʹ since 1998 highly pathogenic strains
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Occurrence, epizootiology?

A

Occurrence, epizootiology

  • Present worldwide: more frequent in shelters and breeding catteries
  • Shedding with excretions (ocular, nasal, oral): transmission by direct contact (indirect, airborne, low significance)
  • Long-term carrier and continuously shedder cats (virus strain dependent)

‣ Persisting infections in the tonsils and nasopharyngeal mucosa

‣ Carry for minimum 30 days ➝ approximately 50% on Day 75

‣ Some cats are lifelong carriers and shedders

‣ FIV infection facilitates shedding

‣ Low, intermediate and high titre shedders ➝ recognition

‣ 20-30% of cats are carriers, vaccination does not influence

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Pathogenesis?

A

Pathogenesis

  1. Oronasal infection ➝ pharynx ➝ viraemia ➝ lungs, mouth, throat, joint synovial membranes, pads, visceral organs

(very virulent strains)

  1. Shedding in saliva, may be present in faeces and urine
  2. Oral mucosa, pads ➝ blisters, epithel necrosis ➝ erosions, neutrophil infiltration
  3. Lungs: alveolitis, exudative pneumonia, proliferative interstitial pneumonia
  4. Joints: acute synovitis, thickened synovial membrane, liquid accumulation
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Clinical signs?

A

Clinical signs

  • Differences in virulence & tissue-tropism: diverse clinical manifestations
  • Viremia: on day 3-4; first fever , mild depression; second fever , lesions/signs
  • (Vesicles) erosions: oral cavity- mainly on the margin of the tongue, lops, nose, pads, rarely skin,
  • healing w/in 2-3 weeks
  • Mild conjunctival & resp signs: sneezing, lacrimation (clear), nasal discharge, rarely pneumonia,
  • dyspnoea, salivation, wet fur
  • Lameness & fever (limping syndrome)
  • Can be independent from the oral & resp signs
  • May be immunocomplex mediated
  • Associated with depression & pneumonia
  • Usually complete recovery w/in 24-48h
  • Has been observed after immunisation with live attenuated vaccine
  • Virulent systemic FCV strains (VS-FCV) ʹ severe systemic syndrome
  • Vasculitis, face & pad (50%), fever (90%), resp signs (50%), icterus (20%), nose & intestinal
  • bleeding (30-40%), up to 60% lethality
  • More severe in adults; in vaccinated cats too
  • Chronic stomatitis: lymphoplastic gingivitis t=stomatitis complex, LPSG ʹ most of the patients
  • are FCV shedders, but other factors(i.e. FIV, individual) may contribute ->anorexia
  • (etiology unclear ʹ mostly FCV but some other conditions too)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Pathology, histopathology?

A

Pathology, histopathology

  • Erosions in the oral cavity, at the margin of the tongue
  • Very virulent strains:
  • vasculitis,
  • enlarged liver,
  • pneumonia,
  • pancreatitis,
  • pericarditis
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Diagnosis?

A

Diagnosis:

  • clinical signs (+/-),
  • oral, pharyngeal, tonsil swab:
  • ELISA, IF , RT-PCR; virus isolation,(serology)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Differential diagnosis?

A

Differential diagnosis

  1. Feline rhinotracheitis: severe upper rep lesions, ocular lesions(keratitis)
  2. Bordatella bronichiseptica: coughing, pneumonia
  3. Chlamydophila felis: conjunctivitis, pneumonia
  4. Lameness, arthritis: FLV, FFoV
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Treatment?

A

Treatment

  • Supportive treatment, enteral nutrition, parenteral fluid, ABs, hyperimmune sera
  • Ribavirin in vitro efficient, in vivo toxic ʹ so cannot use
  • High titre neutralising Abs after recover from natural infection
  • Maternal Abs protect for a few weeks, may persist for 10-14 weeks
  • Attenuated & inactivated vaccines, usually bivalent (FCV, FHV) ʹ calici and herpes
  • Live vaccines: cat can shed the virus and show clinicalsigns
  • Residual virulence, shedding of attenuated strain
  • Commercial vaccines: F9 & 225 strains ʹ relatively broad spectrum of protection
  • Primary vaccination: 9-12 (& 16) weeks of age
  • Vaccination may protect for 10-12 months ʹ yearly repetitions are necessary
  • Vaccination may protect from signs, but not infection & becoming carrier
  • Hygiene, management: closed farming, ID of shedders
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly