1. Viral persistence and abnormalities of the central nervous system after congenital infection of sheep with border disease virus.
- Author
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Potts BJ, Berry LJ, Osburn BI, and Johnson KP
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Viral analysis, Antigens, Viral analysis, Border Disease immunology, Border Disease microbiology, Border Disease pathology, Brain pathology, Central Nervous System Diseases congenital, Central Nervous System Diseases microbiology, Central Nervous System Diseases pathology, Cerebellum microbiology, Cerebellum pathology, Cerebrospinal Fluid microbiology, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Leukocytes microbiology, Sheep, Spinal Cord pathology, Togaviridae immunology, Urine microbiology, Border Disease congenital, Brain microbiology, Central Nervous System Diseases veterinary, Sheep Diseases congenital, Togaviridae isolation & purification
- Abstract
Lambs congenitally infected with border disease (BD) virus and sheep exposed to BD virus as adults were studied for one year to determine the pathogenesis of congenital exposure compared with adult exposure to the virus. Persistent BD virus was isolated in tissue culture and detected by immunofluorescence of the peripheral white blood cells, urine, and cerebrospinal fluid of lambs with congenital BD up to one year of age. These animals had no detectable serum neutralizing antibody response to the virus for the same interval. BD virus antigen was also detected by immunofluorescence in many central nervous system tissues of these lambs with congenital BD. Dysmyelination and glial proliferation in the central nervous system and microencephaly were noted in the lambs with congenital BD, and these lesions appeared to remain the same over a 12-month period.
- Published
- 1985
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