Gallid-1 Herpesvirus Infection in the Chicken. 3. Reinvestigation of the Pathogenesis of Infectious Laryngotracheitis in Acute and Early Post-Acute Respiratory Disease
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Avian Diseases
- Vol. 30 (1) , 179-190
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1590631
Abstract
Specific-pathogen-free chickens were infected via the trachea when 4 weeks old with 2000 plaque-forming units (PFU) of the virulent Australian infectious laryngotracheitis (ILT) virus strain CSW-1. Titers of ILT virus in the trachea were greatest (107.0 PFU/ml in washings, 106.0 PFU/g of tissue) 2-4 days postinfection (PI). Infectivity then declined rapidly, to become undetectable by 7 days PI, although highly localized areas of ILT antigen in the tracheal epithelium were occassionally observed by fluorescent antibody staining at 7 and 8 days PI. Tracheal organ cultures established 7 and 8 days PI provided no evidence of latent ILT virus infection at this immediate post-acute stage of pathogenesis. ILT virus was not isolated from peripheral blood leukocytes or lymphoid organs (spleen, bursa, thymus). ILT virus was found in the trigminal ganglia and/or brain in 14 of 36 chickens (40%) examined between 4 and 7 days after intratracheal inoculation, but it was not in these tissues in five chickens examined at 8 days PI. Virus was also detected at 6 days PI in the trigeminal ganglia in one of five chickens infected by the conjunctival route. These data indicate that the early pathogenesis of ILT (CSW-1) infection frequently involves the tissues of the nervous system. In acute ILT in 4-week-old-chickens, interferon-.alpha./.beta. activity was not detectable in serum or tracheal exudates within 14 days PI, but tracheal washings contained significant virus-neutralizing activity by 7 and 8 days PI. In 3-day-old chickens infected via the trachea with 200 PFU of ILT CSW-1, the clearance of ILT virus from the trachea was similar to that observed in 4-week-old chickens, but ILT virus spread systemically to the livers of 20% by 5-7 days PI.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- REPLICATION OF INFECTIOUS LARYNGOTRACHEITIS VIRUS IN CHICKENS FOLLOWING VACCINATIONAustralian Veterinary Journal, 1981
- A Fluorescent-Antibody Study of the Pathogenesis of Infectious LaryngotracheitisAvian Diseases, 1977