Clinical and virological observations of a mucosal disease outbreak with persistently-infected seropositive survivors

Abstract
A group of 14 four to nine month old calves, clinically healthy but persistently infected with bovine virus diarrhoea virus (BVDV), was obtained from a single farm, and reared as a group. Ten of them were male and were castrated soon after arrival. Signs of mucosal disease (MD) developed within a month and eight of the males had died or been killed on humane grounds by 2 months after purchase. The other two males and one of the females developed more chronic but progressive signs of MD and were killed during the next four months. The remaining three females showed only transient signs of MD followed by clinical recovery. They subsequently remained healthy up to slaughter at 2, 2.5 and 5 years respectively. These three survivors were persistently infected with BVDV, and shed virus in their mucous secretions, although two of them were also seropositive to the virus with fluctuating neutralizing antibody titres (at times as high as 1/960) to a range of BVDV strains including their own persisting virus.