Investigations of Allerton-type herpes virus infection in East African game animals and cattle
- 1 June 1971
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Epidemiology and Infection
- Vol. 69 (2) , 209-222
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022172400021446
Abstract
SUMMARY: Neutralization tests with a strain (BA) of Allerton-type herpes virus, derived from a buffalo (Syncenis caffer) were carried out on 924 sera from 17 species of E. African game animals and on cattle sera from Tanzania (2001), Kenya (792) and Uganda (410).Buffalo populations throughout E. Africa showed a very high rate of infection, with all animals over 2 years of age serologically positive. Antibody was present in some giraffe, waterbuck and hippopotamus sera and, less frequently, in impala, eland, bushbuck and oryx. Data are provided on the titres of positive samples; the mean titre of buffalo sera increased with age.Cattle in many localities of N. Tanzania and S. Kenya showed a very high rate of infection, 85–95% of sera from animals more than 2-years old containing antibody; the titres recorded were lower than those in buffaloes. Very high infection rates were also found in Karamoja and Teso (Uganda) and also in some other areas of Kenya, whilst a considerably lower incidence of infection was detected in W. Nile Province of Uganda and in central Tanzania. Differences in infection rates may have been related to herd size and husbandry practices.It was shown that a wave of infection was probably spreading through cattle in N. Tanzania at about the same time as an outbreak of disease occurred in buffaloes and it is suggested that virus transmission may have been by biting flies.No clinical signs attributable to the virus were reported in cattle but mouth lesions similar to those recorded in buffaloes, or nasal lesions, could have passed undetected. Allerton-type virus probably produces a range of clinical syndromes in cattle, closely resembling those associated with some herpes viruses in primates but infection is seldom related in the field to either pseudo-lumpy skin disease, mammillitis or stomatitis.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Isolation of bovine mammillitis virus from skin gangrene of the bovine udderPublished by Wiley ,1969
- Isolation of Herpes-T virus from a spontaneous disease in squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus)Archiv für die gesamte Virusforschung, 1967
- A virus disease of captive vervet monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops) caused by a new herpesvirusArchiv für die gesamte Virusforschung, 1967
- Some observations on herpes virus mammillitis of bovine animalsVeterinary Record, 1966
- Characteristics of Bovine Mammillitis VirusJournal of General Microbiology, 1966
- Serological evidence for the susceptibility of the hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibiusLinnaeus) to natural infection with rinderpest virusEpidemiology and Infection, 1964
- Isolation of a Cytopathogenic Agent from Skin Lesions of CattleNature, 1960
- NEUROTROPIC VIRUS IN AFRICAN MONKEYSThe Lancet, 1958
- Natural Virus‐B infection in rhesus monkeysThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1958
- PLAQUE FORMATION AND ISOLATION OF PURE LINES WITH POLIOMYELITIS VIRUSESThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1954