Abstract
Eighteen pregnant Merino ewes were inoculated intravenously between days 65 and 68 of gestation with the unpurified cytopathogenic (cp) bovine virus diarrhoea virus (BVDV) strain Indiana (experiment I). In experiment II, three ewes were inoculated with the same virus after two successive plaque isolations in order to compare its pathogenicity for the fetus with special regard to lesions in the fetal brain. In experiment I, fetal blood and tissue samples, allantoic fluids and placentomes were collected sequentially between 10 and 80 days post-inoculation (p.i.). BVDV was recovered from 6 of 19 fetuses examined during the first 3 weeks after inoculation. From fetuses sampled between 30 and 50 days p.i. virus was isolated from three cases only, and from 60 days p.i. onwards virus was no longer recovered. BVDV was longer detected in the allantoic fluid than in fetal tissues and continued to be present until 80 days post-inoculation. From tissue samples of two fetuses of experiment I, only non-cytopathogenic BVDV was isolated, whilst samples from seven fetuses contained the cp BVDV biotype as revealed by an immunoplaque assay. The cp biotype was also isolated from placentomes. In experiment II, virus was not isolated from any of the tissue samples of two living fetuses collected at 67 days post-inoculation. In both experiments, cp BVDV was recovered from allantoic fluid samples. In contrast to the developing fetal brain, other tissues or organs seemed to be less vulnerable to the cp BVDV strain Indiana. The partial purification of this virus strain did not affect its pathogenicity for the brains of the developing fetuses.
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More From: Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B
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