Canine adenovirus - infectious canine hepatitis Flashcards
Canine adenovirus 1 may cause fatal encephalitis in foxes.
T
No long-term carrier stage is seen in canine adenovirus serotype 1 infections.
F
Lymphocyte cell count is not changed during Canine adenovirus 1 infection
F
Canine Adenovirus 1 infection doesn’t cause viraemia
F
Puppies between the age of 3 and 6 months are the most sensitive to canine hepatitis
T
Dogs carry the canine adenovirus in the kidneys for several months
T
Young dogs between the age of 3 and 6 months are most sensitive to canine hepatitis
T
The canine adenovirus causes disease only in dogs
F
Canine adenovirus infects only dogs
F
Canine adenovirus 1 damages endothelial cells
T
Elevated ALT and AST levels in the serum are potential signs of canine infectious
hepatitis
T
Urinary bladder wall oedema is a typical lesion in dogs after canine adenovirus 1
infection
?
Canine adenovirus serotype 1 may cause encephalitis in certain carnivore hosts
T
Only inactivated vaccines are available against infectious canine hepatitis infections
F
Canine adenoviral hepatitis is relatively rare in developed countries, because many dogs
are vaccinated against it
T
Glaucoma is a frequent sign of peracute canine infectious hepatitis
F
Dogs carry Canine adenovirus serotype-1 usually in the spleen
F
Ocular lesions can develop in the extended and chronic stages of canine viral hepatitis.
T
Gallbladder wall oedema is a typical lesion in Canine adenovirus-1 infection.
T
The Canine adenovirus-1 can cause disease only in dogs.
F
Infectious Canine Hepatitis is usually seen in elderly dogs
F
There is serological cross-protection between Canine adenovirus type-1 and 2
T
Both CAdV-2 and CAdV-1 serotypes can be used to vaccinate against Rubarth ́s disease.
T
Canine adenovirus infection is sporadic in Hungary
T