1. Isolation and Characterisation of Equine Rhinopneumontis Virus and Other Equine Herpesviruses from Horses
- 12 March 1970
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Australian Veterinary Journal
- Vol. 46 (3) , 83-89
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1751-0813.1970.tb15927.x
Abstract
Summary: Equine herpesviruses (EH viruses) were isolated from 9 horses in three separate outbreaks of respiratory disease. The pattern of disease in the three stables is described and evidence is presented that some of the horses were ill, possibly as a result of recurrent infection, and that reactivation of a persistent, latent infection may have occurred. An ulcerative condition of the pharyngeal region was seen in some of the horses with EH virus infection.The cytopathogenicity for equine foetal kidney cells of the 9 EH viruses varied considerably. One isolate, EH 39 virus, which was recovered from an acute, upper respiratory tract infection, was rapidly cytopathic for equine foetal kidney cell cultures and was shown in neutralisation tests to be identical with, or closely related to equine rhinopneumonitis virus (EH virus type 1) that is associated with acute respiratory disease and abortion in other countries. More slowly cytopathic isolates were recovered from mild to subclinical upper respiratory tract infections. Evidence is presented that the property of slow cytopathogenicity is probably related to the tendency of these viruses to remain cell associated. Slowly cytopathic isolates were recovered from the nasal cavity of horse 89 on two occasions 79 days apart. One of the eight slowly cytopathic isolates, EH 86 virus, was shown to be antigenically distinct from equine rhinopneumonitis virus (EH 39 virus).Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Human Cells and AgingScientific American, 1968