79. Diseases caused by Orthobunyaviruses (Zoon.). Flashcards
Bunyaviridae family?
Bunyaviridae family
- Genera: Orthobunya, Phlebo, Nairo, Hantavirus genus - more than 300 sp. mainly in tropics
- Peribunyaviridae - Orthobunyavirus: Aino and Akabane disease, Schmallenberg disease
- Virus Morphology
- Segmented (3), ssRNA genoma, helical capsid, enveloped
- Resistance: sensitive to high temperatures, disinfectants and detergents
- Biological properties: arboviruses (except Hantavirus) ➝ mainly mosquito or tick vectors
- Zoonosis
• Antigenicity
- Envelope glycoproteins ➝ good antigens
- Genetic similarities within genera: serogroups, cross-reactions
• Diagnosis
- Direct: virus isolation, IF, HA
- Indirect: VN, ELISA, HAI
Akabane and Schmallenberg disease Epidemiology?
Akabane and Schmallenberg Disease
Epidemiology
• Vertebrate hosts
- Amplifier hosts or reservoirs: small rodents, birds, domesticated animals
- Dead-end hosts (humans)
- Arthropod vectors: biological sectors and transovarial transmission
- Simbu serogroup: Asia, Australia, Africa, Europe, North and South America
- Vector: biting midges
- Reservoirs: birds
- Suffer from disease: cattle, sheep, swine
- Akabane virus: Asia, Africa, Australia, Israel, Turkey ➝ cattle, sheep, goat ➝ abortion, foetal development problems
- Aino virus: Japan, Australia ➝ cattle, sheep ➝ abortion, foetal defects
- Schmallenberg virus: Europe ➝ cattle, sheep ➝ abortion, foetal defects
Akabane disease?
Akabane disease
- Occurrence: Asia, Africa, Australia, Middle East, Turkey, Cyprus
- Vector: Culicoides spp.
- Suffers from disease: cattle, sheep, goat (buffalo, wild ruminants, camel, horse, African swine species)
- Pathogenesis, clinical signs, pathology
- Mosquito bite ➝ few days incubation ➝ viraemia for 4-5 days
- Adults: subclinical seropositivity, if more virulent strain ➝ fever, encephalomyelitis (CNS signs), increased deaths
- Pregnant individuals: infects foetus ➝ abortion, miscarriage, premature birth, foetal arthrogryposis, hydroencephaly, muscle dystrophy
- Diagnosis: clinical signs, pathology, laboratory methods (PCR, isolation, VN, HAI)
- DD: Aino (Japan, Australia), ephemeral fever, Ibaraki disease, bluetongue, Japanese encephalitis, BVD (lab investigations)
- Prevention
- Mosquito control
- Asia, Australia: inactivated vaccines
Schmallenberg disease (SBV) info and epidemiology?
Schmallenberg disease (SBV)
- Dairy cows: increased BT, impaired general condition, anorexia, reduced milk yield ➝ signs disappeared after few days
- Epidemiology
- Occurrence: Europe
- Vector: Culicoides spp. ➝ seasonal in summer, autumn
- Transmission by infected foetus (transport of pregnant animals) so can spread to long distances
- Suffers from disease: cattle, sheep, goat
Pathogenesis of Schmallenberg disease?
Pathogenesis
- Mosquito bite ➝ 2-4 days incubation ➝ viraemia 3-6 days
- Non-pregnant: no clinical signs
- Pregnant + seropositive: no abortion but maternal immunity in newborns
- Pregnant + not seropositive: congenital disorders, abortion
‣ Sheep: between PD30-50 ➝ congenital disorders, abortion
‣ Cattle: first 3 months ➝ brain and spinal cord defects, after PD100 ➝ joint and muscle defects, after 6th month ➝
immunocompetence ➝ only mild defects
Clinical signs of Schmallenberg?
Clinical signs
- Cattle: fever (40.5 ℃), anorexia, diarrhoea, poor condition, reduced milk yield (50%), congenital disorders rarely seen
- Sheep: fever (40.5℃), congenital disorders
‣ Lambs are mainly born at 135-151 days (normal is 147)
‣ Lambs are sometimes born alive, mostly not viable
‣ Several breeds: Suffolk, Texel, Blue Texel, Dairy, Flevolander, Swifter, Blessumer, cross-breeds
‣ Arthrogryposis, hydranencephaly, ankylosis, torticollis, scoliosis, brachygnatia, cerebellar hypoplasia and aplasia,
enlarged thymus
Diagnosis, public health considerations and measures legal action for schmallenberg disease?
• Diagnosis
- RT-PCR: isolation on KC (mosquito) and BHK-21 cells (+IF)
- Virus neutralisation and indirect immunofluorescence test (iIF)
• Public health considerations
- Potentially zoonotic
- Unlikely, no human cases reported ➝ low risk
• Measures, legal actions
- EC ➝ further studies necessary
- OIE recommendations
- Some EU member states: spontaneously implemented suspicion-reporting procedures for abortions, stillbirths and congenital
malformations in ruminants
- Import restrictions
‣ Ban on Dutch breeding heifers: Russia, Ukraine, Morocco, Egypt, Algeria, Jordan
‣ Ban on bovine semen and bovine embryos from Netherlands: USA, Japan, Argentina, Kazakhastan, Morocco, Ukraine,
Russia
Crimean Congo haemorrhagic fever?
• Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever
- Etiology: CCHV, Nairoviridae, Orthanairovirus
- Occurrence: Africa, Asia, Middle East, South Europe, sporadic seropositivity in Hungary
- Vector: tick (Hyalomma) ➝ seasonal, biological vector, transovarial spread
- Susceptible species: Domestic and wild ruminants, rodents ➝ asymptomatic, zoonosis
- Human: damages blood vessel endothel cells and hepatocytes ➝ fever, headache, muscle pain, haemorrhages in skin and
mucosa, bloody urine and faeces
- Mortality: 30-50%
- Diagnosis: clinical signs, presence of ticks, seasonality, lab investigation (RT-PCR, isolation, serology: VN, HAI)
- Treatment: Supportive + Ribavirin
- Prevention: avoid tick bite, protective clothes, no vaccine
Hantavirus-associated diseases?
Hantavirus-associated diseases
- Hantaviridae: Hantaan, Korea
- Reservoirs: Apodemus agrarius, A. flavicollis, mouse, rat, hamster, other small mammals
- Zoonosis ➝ haemorrhagic fever and renal syndrome in human
- Shedding: urine, faeces, saliva
- Airborne infection and viraemia
- Clinical signs
‣ Rodent reservoir ➝ no disease, pathology and histopathology negative
‣ Human ➝ fever, headache, muscle pains, haemorrhages (skin, hemoptysis, hematuria, hematemesis, melon), proteinuria,
20% shock, serious haemorrhage, nephrosis, pulmonary form in USA
- Pathology, Histopathology: peritoneal oedema, myocardial haemorrhage, hyperaemic kidneys, haemorrhage, necrosis ➝
haemorrhage and necrosis in frontal hypophysis
- Diagnosis: RT-PCR, virus isolation, serology: ELISA, IF
- Treatment, Control: symptomatic treatment
‣ Infected pet rodents: stamping out, regular control of breeders
‣ Avoid contact with wild rodents
Severe fever and thrombocytopenia syndrome(SFTS)?
Severe fever and thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS)
- Phlebovirus
- Asia (China, Korea, Japan), Europe mediterranean countries, USA
- Zoonosis
- Tick vector: Haemaphysalis longicornis, Rhipicephalus microplus
- Sheep, goat, cattle, horse, dog, cat, human (without tick too)
- Animals ➝ symptomatic infection
- Human ➝ fever, thrombocytopenia, leukocytopenia, enteric symptoms, liver enzyme elevation, blood lab value changes