Year 2018 - Volume 38, Number 1


Title
Epidemiological, clinical and pathological features of canine parvovirus 2c infection in dogs from southern Brazil, 38(1):113-118
Authors

Abstract
ABSTRACT.- De Oliveira P.S.B., Cargnelutti J.F., Masuda E.K., Fighera R.A., Kommers G.D., Silva M.C., Weiblen R. & Flores E.F. 2018. Epidemiological, clinical and pathological features of canine parvovirus 2c infection in dogs from southern Brazil. [Aspectos epidemiológicos, clínicos e patológicos da infecção pelo parvovirus canino 2c em cães do Sul do Brasil.] Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira 38(1):113-118. Setor de Virologia, Departamento de Medicina Veterinária Preventiva, Centro de Ciências Rurais, Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Av. Roraima 1000, 63A, Santa Maria, RS 97105-900, Brazil. E-mail: eduardofurtadoflores@gmail.com

Canine parvovirus type 2c (CPV-2c) emerged in Europe in the early 2000’s and rapidly spread out worldwide. Clinical and molecular data have demonstrated its circulation in Brazilian dogs, yet detailed descriptions of cases are still lacking. This article describes the epidemiological, clinical and pathological features of 24 cases of CPV-2c-associated disease in dogs submitted to veterinary clinics and laboratory diagnosis in southern Brazil (2014-2016). Most affected dogs presented signs/lesions suggestive of parvovirus enteritis: diarrhea, vomiting, hyperemia and hemorrhage of the serous membrane of the small intestine, diffuse segmental granulation, atrophy of the villi, necrosis and fusion of crypts, squamous metaplasia and epithelial syncytia. A number of cases presented features divergent from the classical presentations, including a wide variation in the color of feces (reddish and/or yellowish, light-brownish, orange-brown and brownish), involvement of adults (4/24) and vaccinated dogs (12/24), extensive involvement of the small intestine (8/20) and the presence of pulmonary edema (7/24) and convulsions (3/24). Feces and intestinal fragments submitted to PCR for the CPV-2 VP2 gene and to virus isolation in cell culture yielded positive results in 100% and 58.3% (14/24) of the cases, respectively. Nucleotide sequencing revealed a high nucleotide identity in VP2 (99.4 to 100%) and a consistent mutation at amino acid 426 (asparagine to glutamic acid), considered a signature of CPV-2c. These results confirm the involvement of CPV-2c in the described cases and demonstrate the importance of CPV-2c infection among Brazilian dogs, calling attention of veterinarians to correctly diagnose the disease, mainly considering the frequent atypical presentations.
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