Feline Panleucopenia
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This article is still under construction. |
Antigenicity
- One serotype
Hosts
- Cats
- Mink
- Raccoons
- Pandas
Pathogenesis
- Also known as Feline Infectious Enteritis and Feline Panleukopenia
- Often fatal
- Pyrexia, severe enteritis (often bloody), dehydration, leukopenia, anemia
- Kittens <2 weeks show cerebellar hypoplasia
- Kittens more susceptible than cats
- Oral infection
- Initial replication in pharyngeal lymphoid tissue
- Viremia
- Virus targets rapidly dividing cells: lymph nodes, bone marrow, crypts of small intestine
Epidemiology
- Infection by direct contact and fomites
- Subclinical infections occur
- Virus excretion can be persistent
- Endemic worldwide
Diagnosis
- Clinical signs
- Hematology: leukopenia
- Can be confirmed by haemagglutination (HA) or ELISA using feces
Control
- Inactivated vaccines are available and essential for boarding
- Administered parenterally post-weaning to induce a systemic immune response to neutralize viremia
- Annual booster
Parvovirus Enteritis
- Parvovirus enteritis is also know as feline infectious enteritis or feline panleucopenia
- Since a vaccine is available, this disease is now uncommon.
- Over the last 10/15 years this has been seen primarily in the cat, but it is now also seen in the dog.
Clinical
- Manifests mainly in cats under 6 months old.
- Common in groups of unvaccinated cats.
- Produces big outbreaks, with vomiting and pyrexia.
- Severe vomiting and diarrhoea occur.
- diarrhoea is thin, watery and foul-smelling, and may also be blood-tinged.
- Animals usually die despite treatment- die from dehydration.
- diarrhoea is thin, watery and foul-smelling, and may also be blood-tinged.
- Animals suffer from fever.
- Pancytopaenia also occures.
- White blood cell count drops very low so as to become almost non-existent.
- Drops to 1/ml from 10000/ml.
- Animals may therefore also die from other infections.
- White blood cell count drops very low so as to become almost non-existent.
Pathology
Gross
- Virus targets crypt cells and lymphoid areas.
- Causes villus atrophy.
- In the cat, the intestine is thickened, turgid and swollen.
- Has a pale, dull and mottled appearance.
- The contents are rather dry - this gets worse lower down the gut.
- Areas of depression in the mucosa can be seen in the upper small bowel.
- Due to necrosis of tissue overlying Peyers patch.
- Lower down in the gut, enteritis is apparent.
- Cat- fibrinous.
- Dog- haemorrhagic.
- Blood in lumen.
- Inflammation sometimes doesn't appear very severe.
- There may be very few lesions
- Histology is usually required for diagnosis.
- A radiomimetic virus.
- Affects all rapidly dividing cells and destroys them.
- E.g. epithelium in the base of the crypts of small intestine are killed.
- Affects all rapidly dividing cells and destroys them.
Histological
- The crypt lining cells undergo complete necrosis, but very little inflammation occurs.
- Collapse of villous architecture.
- May be fibrinous exudates on surface of mucosa.
- The submucosa and lamina propria are not affected and are left intact.
- Many neutrophils in the lamina propria.
- Cyst-like structures are seen in the deepest parts of the glands of the intestinal mucosa, if the animal survives for more than a few days.
- Flattened epithelial cells line these cystic glands.
- Are enterocytes trying to repair the damage.
- However, animals usually die from dehydration or secondary infection before the mucosa recovers.
- Flattened epithelial cells line these cystic glands.
- Inclusion bodies may be seen, but these are very hard to find.
- May get lymphocyte invasion of mucosa.
- Lymph nodes appear pale and oedematous, and almost aplastic.
- Bone marrow appears pale and fatty looking and is depleted of cells.