Divers, Thomas J., Tennant, Bud C., Kumar, Arvind, McDonough, Sean, Cullen, John, Bhuva, Nishit, Jain, Komal, Chauhan, Lokendra Singh, Scheel, Troels Kasper Høyer, Lipkin, W. Ian, Laverack, Melissa, Trivedi, Sheetal, Srinivasa, Satyapramod, Beard, Laurie, Rice, Charles M., Burbelo, Peter D., Renshaw, Randall W., Dubovi, Edward, and Kapoor, Amit
Equine serum hepatitis (i.e., Theiler's disease) is a serious and often life-threatening disease of unknown etiology that affects horses. A horse in Nebraska, USA, with serum hepatitis died 65 days after treatment with equine-origin tetanus antitoxin. We identified an unknown parvovirus in serum and liver of the dead horse and in the administered antitoxin. The equine parvovirus-hepatitis (EqPV-H) shares <50% protein identity with its phylogenetic relatives of the genus Copiparvovirus. Next, we experimentally infected 2 horses using a tetanus antitoxin contaminated with EqPV-H. Viremia developed, the horses seroconverted, and acute hepatitis developed that was confirmed by clinical, biochemical, and histopathologic testing. We also determined that EqPV-H is an endemic infection because, in a cohort of 100 clinically normal adult horses, 13 were viremic and 15 were seropositive. We identified a new virus associated with equine serum hepatitis and confirmed its pathogenicity and transmissibility through contaminated biological products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]