Abstract

Outbreaks of a canine distemper-like acute disease brought high mortalities to seal populations in north-west Europe and Lake Baikal from late 1987 to 1988. During these outbreaks three seals which were introduced from Lake Baikal to an aquarium in Japan developed a distemper-like disease and other seals raised in the same room were similarly affected. Clinical signs of dead seals were anorexia, diphasic fever, dyspnea, and neuromuscular tics. Characteristic microscopic lesions of acute interstitial pneumonia seen in the lung were accompanied with hyperplasia and syncytial giant cell formation of type II pneumocytes. Eosinophilic intranuclear and cytoplasmic inclusion bodies were present in bronchial epithelial cells, type II pneumocytes, epithelial cells of bile ducts and interlobular ducts of pancreas, transitional epithelium of renal pelvis, and reticular cells of lymph nodes. Ultrastructure of inclusion bodies was similar to that seen in cells infected with morbilliviruses. Serum samples from recovered seals had virus-neutralization antibodies against canine distemper virus. The present cases were the first report of morbillivirus infection of aquarium seals in Japan.

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