MALIGNANT CATARRHAL FEVER IN FARMED RUSA DEER (CERVUS TIMORENSIS): 2. Animal Transmission and Virological Studies
- 9 March 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Australian Veterinary Journal
- Vol. 58 (3) , 88-92
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1751-0813.1982.tb00597.x
Abstract
SUMMARY A disease with clinical signs and histological lesions similar to malignant catarrhal fever in cattle was transmitted from Rusa deer (Cervus timorensis) to rabbits. This was accomplished on 3 separate occasions, and the disease was serially passaged in rabbits up to 11 times. The clinical signs in affected rabbits were pyrexia, depression, anorexia, mucopurulent conjuctivitis, nasal discharge and diarrhoea. These signs were seen in 27 of 38 inoculated rabbits with the mean incubation period being 12 days (range 8 to 20 days). Histologically, affected rabbits exhibited mononuclear perivascular cuffing and vasculitis in the brain, heart, liver and kidney. Lymph nodes and spleen showed destruction and loss of mature lymphocytes and lymphoid follicles and an increased number of large lymphoblastoid cells. These clinical signs and lesions were not detected in control rabbits. The disease was not transmitted to cattle, sheep, guinea pigs or mice, nor was an agent isolated in cattle, deer or rabbit tissue cultures, or in chicken embryos.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Synovitis and bovine syncytial virus isolation in experimentally induced malignant catarrhal feverJournal of Comparative Pathology, 1980
- Transmission of malignant catarrhal fever to rabbitsPublished by Wiley ,1980
- The Pathomorphology of Malignant Catarrhal FeverVeterinary Pathology, 1980
- The Pathomorphology of Malignant Catarrhal FeverVeterinary Pathology, 1980
- The nature of the acute lymphoid proliferation in rabbits infected with the herpes virus of bovine malignant catarrhal feverPublished by Elsevier ,1979
- Wildebeest-associated malignant catarrhal fever in Africa: A neoplastic disease of cattle caused by an oncogenic herpesvirus?Comparative Immunology, Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, 1979
- An epizootic of malignant catarrhal feverNew Zealand Veterinary Journal, 1975
- Bovine malignant catarrhal fever in New ZealandNew Zealand Veterinary Journal, 1956
- BOVINE MALIGNANT CATARRHAustralian Veterinary Journal, 1956
- Transmission Experiments with Bovine Malignant CatarrhJournal of Comparative Pathology and Therapeutics, 1936