Experiments on intramuscular inoculation and feeding domestic cats (Felis catus) with brains of mice previously infected by rabies viruses | Ensaios sobre inoculação intramuscular e alimentação de gatos domésticos (Felis catus) com cérebros de camundongos préviamente inoculados com vírus da raiva
2007
Renata Kashiwakura Shirakawa | Adriana Cortez | Leonardo José Richtzenhain | Takuya Itoou | Takeo Sakai | Fumio Honma Ito
Nineteen kittens divided into four groups were fed with brains of mice infected with rabies viruses. Each four kittens (group I) received four brains infected with the PV fixed strain; nine kittens (group II) ingested 4-5 brains infected with the field isolate T-9/95, isolated from the Desmodus rotundus vampire bat; two kittens (group III) fed ten T-9/95-infected brains, and four cats consumed 32-37 PV strain-infected brains. One adult male, inoculated into masseter muscle with a 20% T-9/95-infected brain suspension, presented rabies after an incubation period of six days, followed with 8 days of clinical evolution, and died thereafter and this cat was considered as the rabies "positive standard". After observing for 20-230 days, all the cats feeding the rabid brains were submitted to euthanasia, by using Acepran®, Zoletil®, and T-61®. At necropsy, samples of brain, heart, lung, kidney, submaxillary salivary gland, and cervical medulla were collected from all the cats and further submitted to the direct fluorescence antibody test (dFA), mouse inoculation test (MIT) and to the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) technique. Brain, cervical medulla, and the submaxillary salivary gland of the positive standard cat were dFA-positive, and brain and cervical medulla were positive for MIT. All specimens of this cat tested by the RT-PCR were found positive. No animals ingesting PV or T-9/95 virus-infected brains developed clinical signs and all materials tested were negative by dFA and MIT. Several specimens, however, showed positive reactions by the RT-PCR technique, but cats were resistant to rabies through the viruses administered orally.
Show more [+] Less [-]Dezenove gatos, divididos em quatro grupos, foram alimentados com cérebros de camundongos infectados com vírus de raiva. Cada um dos quatro gatos (grupo I) receberam quatro cérebros infectados com vírus fixo PV; nove gatos (grupo II) ingeriram 4-5 cérebros infectados com uma amostra de campo T-9/95, isolada do morcego Desmodus rotundus; dois gatos (grupo III) ingeriram 10 cérebros infectados com T-9/95 e quatro gatos (grupo IV) ingeriram 32-37 cérebros infectados com vírus PV. Um macho adulto, inoculado no músculo masséter, com uma suspensão cerebral a 20% da amostra T-9/95, desenvolveu raiva após período de incubação de seis dias, seguidos por oito dias de evolução clínica, morrendo em seguida. Este gato foi denominado de "padrão positivo". Após observação por um período de 20-230 dias, todos os gatos que receberam cérebros foram submetidos à eutanásia, utilizando Acepran®, Zoletil® e T-61®. À necropsia, foram colhidas amostras do cérebro, coração, pulmão, rim, glândula salivar submaxilar e medula cervical e submetidas à prova de imunofluorescência direta (IFD), inoculação em camundongos (IC), e reação em cadeia pela polimerase-transcriptase reversa (RT-PCR). No "padrão positivo", cérebro, medula cervical e glândula salivar foram positivos à IFD e à IC, cérebro e medula cervical foram os positivos. Todos os espécimes do "padrão positivo" foram positivos à RT-PCR. Nenhum animal que ingeriu cérebros contendo amostras de vírus PV ou T-9/95 apresentou sinais clínicos e todos os espécimes testados foram negativos à IFD e IC, no entanto, alguns espécimes reagiram positivamente à RT-PCR, porém, os gatos foram resistentes à raiva com vírus administrados oralmente.
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