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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Nosocomial Outbreak of Serious Canine Infectious Tracheobronchitis (Kennel Cough) Caused by Canine Herpesvirus Infection

Journal:
Journal of Clinical Microbiology
Year:
2010
Authors:
Kawakami, Kazuo et al.
Affiliation:
Advanced Technology Development Center, Kyoritsu Seiyaku Corporation, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 300-1252
Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A recent outbreak of a serious respiratory illness known as infectious tracheobronchitis (often called kennel cough) was linked to canine herpesvirus (CHV) in older dogs at an animal medical center. This virus usually affects pregnant dogs and newborn puppies, but in this case, it caused severe illness and even death among older dogs that were already weakened by medications that lowered their immune systems. The researchers found that CHV was the only virus present and that it likely spread among the dogs in the clinic. They noted that this situation serves as a warning for veterinary clinics, as similar outbreaks could happen in places where kennel cough is common. The treatment and management of this outbreak highlighted the potential seriousness of CHV in certain vulnerable dog populations.

Abstract

ABSTRACTCanine herpesvirus (CHV;Canid herpesvirus 1) is principally a perinatal pathogen of pregnant bitches and newborn pups and secondarily a respiratory tract pathogen of older pups and dogs. Infectious disease of the canine respiratory tract frequently occurs among dogs in groups, in which it is called “ infectious tracheobronchitis” (ITB). Mortality from ITB is generally negligible, and the clinical importance of CHV as an ITB pathogen is considered to be low. The present report describes a novel ITB outbreak accompanied by death among aged dogs in an animal medical center. Most inpatient dogs had received medications that could induce immunosuppression. CHV was the only pathogen identified, and several CHV isolates were recovered in cell culture. No other viral pathogens or significant bacterial pathogens were found. Molecular and serological analyses revealed that the causative CHV isolates were from a single source but that none was a peculiar strain when the strains were compared with previous CHV strains. The virus had presumably spread among the dogs predisposed to infection in the center. The present results serve as a warning to canine clinics that, under the specific set of circumstances described, such serious CHV outbreaks may be expected wherever canine ITB occurs.

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Original publication: https://doi.org/10.1128/jcm.02128-09