1. Genital herpesvirus hominis infection in mice. I. Development of an experimental model.
- Author
-
Overall JC Jr, Kern ER, Schlitzer RL, Friedman SB, and Glasgow LA
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood microbiology, Brain microbiology, Female, Genitalia, Female microbiology, Herpesviridae Infections, Liver microbiology, Mice, Mucous Membrane microbiology, Pregnancy, Simplexvirus isolation & purification, Spinal Cord microbiology, Spleen microbiology, Vaginitis etiology, Virus Replication, Disease Models, Animal, Simplexvirus immunology
- Abstract
Pregnant female mice, after intravaginal inoculation with Herpesvirus hominis (HVH) type 2, developed vaginitis on days 5 to 7 after virus challenge, followed by hunching and hind limb paralysis on days 7 to 9 and death from encephalitis on days 9 to 11. After initial replication in the mucous membranes of the genital tract, virus spread to the spinal cord and ascended to involve the brain. Viremia or replication of H. hominis type 2 in the liver or spleen was not detected. Virus was cleared from vaginal secretions by days 8 to 10 after infection. Pregnant mice were more susceptible to the infection than nonpregnant mice. This experimental infection in female mice provides a model for genital herpesvirus infection and for herpesvirus infection and for herpesvirus encephalitis in which one can evaluate potentially promising antiviral chemotherapeutic agents.
- Published
- 1975
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