Cargando…

An Outbreak of Limping Syndrome Associated with Feline Calicivirus

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Feline calicivirus (FCV) is a highly contagious virus found in cats and a cause of upper respiratory and oral infections. Typical clinical signs of FCV include nasal discharge, gingivitis, and stomatitis. FCV is also able to affect the joints of cats, resulting in lameness. In this s...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lanave, Gianvito, Buonavoglia, Alessio, Pellegrini, Francesco, Di Martino, Barbara, Di Profio, Federica, Diakoudi, Georgia, Catella, Cristiana, Omar, Ahmed H., Vasinioti, Violetta I., Cardone, Roberta, Santo, Giacinto, Martella, Vito, Camero, Michele
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10251824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37889723
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13111778
_version_ 1785056024489623552
author Lanave, Gianvito
Buonavoglia, Alessio
Pellegrini, Francesco
Di Martino, Barbara
Di Profio, Federica
Diakoudi, Georgia
Catella, Cristiana
Omar, Ahmed H.
Vasinioti, Violetta I.
Cardone, Roberta
Santo, Giacinto
Martella, Vito
Camero, Michele
author_facet Lanave, Gianvito
Buonavoglia, Alessio
Pellegrini, Francesco
Di Martino, Barbara
Di Profio, Federica
Diakoudi, Georgia
Catella, Cristiana
Omar, Ahmed H.
Vasinioti, Violetta I.
Cardone, Roberta
Santo, Giacinto
Martella, Vito
Camero, Michele
author_sort Lanave, Gianvito
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Feline calicivirus (FCV) is a highly contagious virus found in cats and a cause of upper respiratory and oral infections. Typical clinical signs of FCV include nasal discharge, gingivitis, and stomatitis. FCV is also able to affect the joints of cats, resulting in lameness. In this study, we monitored a small outbreak of FCV limping disease in two household cats. The transmission between the two animals likely occurred indirectly via virus shed in the environment from the respiratory tract. The findings of this study highlight the need for the adoption of adequate prophylaxis measures to prevent the transmission of highly transmissible infectious diseases. ABSTRACT: Feline calicivirus (FCV) is a common viral pathogen found in domestic cats. FCV is highly contagious and demonstrates a high genetic variability. Upper respiratory tract disease, oral ulcerations, salivation, and gingivitis–stomatitis have been regarded as typical clinical signs of FCV infection. Ulcerative dermatitis, abortion, severe pneumonia, enteritis, chronic stomatitis, and virulent systemic disease have been reported more sporadically. Limping syndrome has been also described either in naturally or experimentally FCV-infected cats. In this study, we monitored a small outbreak of FCV infection in two household cats, in which limping disease was monitored with a 12-day lag time. The complete genome sequence was determined for the viruses isolated from the oropharyngeal and rectal swabs of the two animals, mapping up to 39 synonymous nucleotide mutations. The four isolates were sensitive to low pH conditions and trypsin treatment, a pattern usually associated with viruses isolated from the upper respiratory tract. Overall, the asynchronous pattern of infections and the results of genome sequencing suggest that a virus of respiratory origin was transmitted between the animals and that the FCV strain was able to retain the limping disease pathotype during the transmission chain, as previously observed in experimental studies with FCV strains associated with lameness.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10251824
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-102518242023-06-10 An Outbreak of Limping Syndrome Associated with Feline Calicivirus Lanave, Gianvito Buonavoglia, Alessio Pellegrini, Francesco Di Martino, Barbara Di Profio, Federica Diakoudi, Georgia Catella, Cristiana Omar, Ahmed H. Vasinioti, Violetta I. Cardone, Roberta Santo, Giacinto Martella, Vito Camero, Michele Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Feline calicivirus (FCV) is a highly contagious virus found in cats and a cause of upper respiratory and oral infections. Typical clinical signs of FCV include nasal discharge, gingivitis, and stomatitis. FCV is also able to affect the joints of cats, resulting in lameness. In this study, we monitored a small outbreak of FCV limping disease in two household cats. The transmission between the two animals likely occurred indirectly via virus shed in the environment from the respiratory tract. The findings of this study highlight the need for the adoption of adequate prophylaxis measures to prevent the transmission of highly transmissible infectious diseases. ABSTRACT: Feline calicivirus (FCV) is a common viral pathogen found in domestic cats. FCV is highly contagious and demonstrates a high genetic variability. Upper respiratory tract disease, oral ulcerations, salivation, and gingivitis–stomatitis have been regarded as typical clinical signs of FCV infection. Ulcerative dermatitis, abortion, severe pneumonia, enteritis, chronic stomatitis, and virulent systemic disease have been reported more sporadically. Limping syndrome has been also described either in naturally or experimentally FCV-infected cats. In this study, we monitored a small outbreak of FCV infection in two household cats, in which limping disease was monitored with a 12-day lag time. The complete genome sequence was determined for the viruses isolated from the oropharyngeal and rectal swabs of the two animals, mapping up to 39 synonymous nucleotide mutations. The four isolates were sensitive to low pH conditions and trypsin treatment, a pattern usually associated with viruses isolated from the upper respiratory tract. Overall, the asynchronous pattern of infections and the results of genome sequencing suggest that a virus of respiratory origin was transmitted between the animals and that the FCV strain was able to retain the limping disease pathotype during the transmission chain, as previously observed in experimental studies with FCV strains associated with lameness. MDPI 2023-05-26 /pmc/articles/PMC10251824/ /pubmed/37889723 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13111778 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Lanave, Gianvito
Buonavoglia, Alessio
Pellegrini, Francesco
Di Martino, Barbara
Di Profio, Federica
Diakoudi, Georgia
Catella, Cristiana
Omar, Ahmed H.
Vasinioti, Violetta I.
Cardone, Roberta
Santo, Giacinto
Martella, Vito
Camero, Michele
An Outbreak of Limping Syndrome Associated with Feline Calicivirus
title An Outbreak of Limping Syndrome Associated with Feline Calicivirus
title_full An Outbreak of Limping Syndrome Associated with Feline Calicivirus
title_fullStr An Outbreak of Limping Syndrome Associated with Feline Calicivirus
title_full_unstemmed An Outbreak of Limping Syndrome Associated with Feline Calicivirus
title_short An Outbreak of Limping Syndrome Associated with Feline Calicivirus
title_sort outbreak of limping syndrome associated with feline calicivirus
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10251824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37889723
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13111778
work_keys_str_mv AT lanavegianvito anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT buonavogliaalessio anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT pellegrinifrancesco anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT dimartinobarbara anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT diprofiofederica anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT diakoudigeorgia anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT catellacristiana anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT omarahmedh anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT vasiniotiviolettai anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT cardoneroberta anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT santogiacinto anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT martellavito anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT cameromichele anoutbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT lanavegianvito outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT buonavogliaalessio outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT pellegrinifrancesco outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT dimartinobarbara outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT diprofiofederica outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT diakoudigeorgia outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT catellacristiana outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT omarahmedh outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT vasiniotiviolettai outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT cardoneroberta outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT santogiacinto outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT martellavito outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus
AT cameromichele outbreakoflimpingsyndromeassociatedwithfelinecalicivirus