Difference between revisions of "Feline Immunodeficiency Virus"
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Line 46: | Line 46: | ||
*Isolate and castrate | *Isolate and castrate | ||
*Preventative neutering of males | *Preventative neutering of males | ||
− | [[Category:Lentiviruses]][[Category:Cat]] | + | |
+ | |||
+ | (FIV) | ||
+ | *Lentivirus | ||
+ | *Subtypes A, B and D | ||
+ | *Causes increased susceptibility to infections and neoplasia | ||
+ | *Specifically destroys [[Lymphocytes#Helper CD4+|CD4+ T cells]] | ||
+ | *Virus is present in saliva, blood and other bodily fluids | ||
+ | *Feral and outdoor cats (mostly tom cats) are most at risk | ||
+ | *Virus replicates in lymphoid tissue | ||
+ | *Can remain asymptomatic | ||
+ | *Causes pyrexia and lymphadenopathy | ||
+ | *Transmitted by biting | ||
+ | *Diagnosis: | ||
+ | **ELISA | ||
+ | **Rapid-Immuno-Migration | ||
+ | **Western Blot | ||
+ | **Virus Isolation | ||
+ | **Immunofluorescence | ||
+ | **PCR | ||
+ | *Treatment: | ||
+ | **Antibiotics for secondary infection | ||
+ | **Anti-retroviral therapy | ||
+ | *For vaccinations see [[Vaccines - WikiBlood#Cat Vaccinations|here]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Lentiviruses]][[Category:Cat]][[Category:Secondary Immunodeficiency]] | ||
[[Category:To_Do_-_Clinical/Viruses]] | [[Category:To_Do_-_Clinical/Viruses]] | ||
[[Category:To Do - Blood]][[Category:Lymphoreticular and Haemopoietic Diseases]] | [[Category:To Do - Blood]][[Category:Lymphoreticular and Haemopoietic Diseases]] |
Revision as of 14:12, 12 August 2010
Feline Immunodeficiency Virus is commonly abbreviated to FIV
Antigenicity
- Unrelated to HIV
- No vaccinal protection between USA Petulama prototype and UK (Hayling Island) isolate
Hosts
- Cats, including large cats on game reserves
Pathogenesis
- Receptor: CD134, found on monocyte-derived macrophages and activated T cells
- Net effect: disruption of acquired immune response
- Infected cats develop antibody whether or not they are able to clear the virus
Two versions:
- Avirulent:
- Transient infection with no CD4 decline
- Virulent:
- Progressive CD4 decline with three stages (may present indistinct)
- High circulating virus for 1-10 weeks with resulting lymphoid depletion and CD8CD4 double positive Tcell destruction, thymic aplasia esp in kittens
- Remission: decrease in circulating virus as immune response increases, followed by immune exhaustion
- Increase in CD8+ production and antibody response
- Paracortical T cells and lymphoid follicles expand in primary and secondary lymph tissue and may be visible as white nodules
- Rapidly progressing infection with high virus present
- Feline AIDS presents in a minority of cases
- Nonregenerative anemia
- Leucopenia
- Neutropenia
- Skin infections
- Usually followed by secondary infection as a result of immunosuppression
- Virus-ridden T cell destroy normal T cells, causing chronic immunosuppression
- Progressive CD4 decline with three stages (may present indistinct)
Epidemiology
- Transfer via saliva, though usually through a bite (FIV is the disease of enemies)
- Can transfer via milk or mutual grooming in multicat households
- Also transferred via mating
- Particular concern amongst stray males: 3.5% of healthy UK cats are seropositive, but in stray toms, up to 10% are positive
- Four-fold more common in diseased cats than in healthy cats
Diagnosis
- ELISA for serum antibody
- False positives occur, particularly in the presence of maternal Ab
- Positives can be confirmed by lab work (Western blotting)
Control
- No UK vaccine
- Healthy positive cats should have diagnose confirmed by further testing
- Isolate and castrate
- Preventative neutering of males
(FIV)
- Lentivirus
- Subtypes A, B and D
- Causes increased susceptibility to infections and neoplasia
- Specifically destroys CD4+ T cells
- Virus is present in saliva, blood and other bodily fluids
- Feral and outdoor cats (mostly tom cats) are most at risk
- Virus replicates in lymphoid tissue
- Can remain asymptomatic
- Causes pyrexia and lymphadenopathy
- Transmitted by biting
- Diagnosis:
- ELISA
- Rapid-Immuno-Migration
- Western Blot
- Virus Isolation
- Immunofluorescence
- PCR
- Treatment:
- Antibiotics for secondary infection
- Anti-retroviral therapy
- For vaccinations see here