| Literature DB >> 19523285 |
Marietjie Venter1, Stacey Human, Dewald Zaayman, Gertruida H Gerdes, June Williams, Johan Steyl, Patricia A Leman, Janusz Tadeusz Paweska, Hildegard Setzkorn, Gavin Rous, Sue Murray, Rissa Parker, Cynthia Donnellan, Robert Swanepoel.
Abstract
Serologic evidence suggests that West Nile virus (WNV) is widely distributed in horses in southern Africa. However, because few neurologic cases have been reported, endemic lineage 2 strains were postulated to be nonpathogenic in horses. Recent evidence suggests that highly neuroinvasive lineage 2 strains exist in humans and mice. To determine whether neurologic cases are being missed in South Africa, we tested 80 serum or brain specimens from horses with unexplained fever (n = 48) and/or neurologic signs (n = 32) for WNV. From March 2007 through June 2008, using reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) and immunoglobulin (Ig) M ELISA, we found WNV RNA or IgM in 7/32 horses with acute neurologic disease; 5 horses died or were euthanized. In 5/7 horses, no other pathogen was detected. DNA sequencing for all 5 RT-PCR-positive cases showed the virus belonged to lineage 2. WNV lineage 2 may cause neurologic disease in horses in South Africa.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19523285 PMCID: PMC2727306 DOI: 10.3201/eid1506.081515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Viral diagnostic findings, West Nile virus–infected horses, South Africa*
| Case no. | Date sample received | Location | Specimen | Final diagnosis | Results of tests for other viruses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAE12/07 | 2007 Apr 23 | Johannesburg, Sandton, Gauteng | Plasma | WNV IgM+ | AHSV–, EEV– |
| SAE89/08 | 2008 Mar 3 | Colesburg North Cape | Plasma | WNV IgM+ | AHSV–, EEV– |
| HS101/08 | 2008 Apr 15 | Tiegerpoort Pretoria, Gauteng | Brain | WNV PCR+, DNA sequencing L2, virus isolae WNV PCR+ | Rabies–, AHSV–, EEV–, EHV–, flavivirus antigen in lumbar spinal cord section and in some gray matter axons ( |
| M123/08 | 2008 May 8 | Midrand, Gauteng | Brain | WNV PCR+, DNA sequencing L2 | AHSV–, EEV–, EHV– |
| HS125/08 | 2008 May 26 | Pretoria, Hammans-kraal, Gauteng | Brain | WNV PCR+, DNA sequencing L2 | AHSV from spleen PCR+; AHSV from lung IHC+, lymph node IHC–, liver IHC– |
| SAE126/08 | 2008 Mar 7 | Midrand, Gauteng | Brain | WNV PCR+, DNA sequencing L2 | AHSV RT-PCR+, AHSV type 7; IHC EEV–, AHSV+, AHSV IHC+ (lung liver, heart) |
| SAE134/09 | 2008 Jul 18 | Potchef-stroom, North-Western Province | Serum | WNV PCR+, DNA sequencing L2 | AHSV–, EEV–, EHV-1 weak sero+ |
*WNV, West Nile virus, Ig, immunoglobuliln; AHSV, African horse sickness virus; EEV, equine encephalosis virus; EHV, equine herpesvirus; L2, lineage 2; –, negative; +, positive; RT-PCR, reverse transcription–PCR; IHC, immunohistochemistry.
Clinical findings, West Nile virus–infected horses, South Africa*
| Case no. | Age | Clinical findings | Outcome | Postmortem findings | Histopathologic findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAE12/07 | 5 y | Neurologic signs, hind and fore limb ataxia, pupil miosis, head held to left | Survived | ||
| SAE89/08 | 1 y | Neurologic signs, hind and forelimb ataxia, fever, complete paralysis, anorexia, hepatitis | Died (euthanized after week of fluid therapy) | Postmortem not done | |
| HS101/08 | 8 y | Neurologic signs, severe ataxia especially hind limb, seizures and chewing, froth from mouth, fever, recumbency, paralysis | Died | Marked generalized subcutaneous edema involving trunk and proximal forelimbs, edema (periaortic, coronary grooves, neck, and hind quarters), partial pulmonary collapse, foam-filled trachea, mild serosanguinous hydrothorax, moderate hydropericardium, subpleural petechiae and ecchymoses, epicardial grooves and at bases of the mitral valves | Lesions in gray matter and meninges of lumbar spinal cord (pericentral canal gliosis, edema, gray matter gliosis with occasional neuronal degeneration or death), mild perivascular cuffing with mononuclear cells and scattered neutrophils, moderate vascular congestion, occasional perivascular petechiae, mild leptomeningitis (mostly round cells) and occasional mild spinal ganglioneuritis, segmental mural necrosis of the dural blood vessels and neutrophil invasion, less-marked lesions in rest of spinal cord and white matter of midbrain |
| M123/08 | 4 mo | Fever, neurologic signs, paralysis (Schiff-Sherington sign), rectal prolapse | Died | Severe perirenal and intermuscular edema, severe diffuse interlobular lung edema and mild serous hydropericardium | Marked white matter lesions in peripheral lateral and ventromedial spinal cord white matter, mild perivascular round cell cuffing in midbrain, patchy spongiosis and gliosis in brain and cerebellum white matter |
| HS125/08 | 8 mo | Neurologic signs, ataxia, mild colic, swollen head and neck | Died (shot by owner) | Severe lung edema and congestion, moderate serous hydropericardium, intermuscular edema | Subtle lesions on brain and cerebellum sections (e.g., gliosis and spongiosis in white matter and vascular leukostasis) |
| SAE126/08 | 6 y | Neurologic signs, head hanging, sick for week | Died suddenly | Spinal cord lesions | |
| SAE134/09 | 19 y | Neurologic signs, partial blindness, hyperexcitability, seizures | Survived |
*AHSV, African horse sickness virus; IHC, immunohistochemistry.
Figure 1Histopathologic section of 2 lumbar spine gray matter dendrites that stained immunohistochemically positive with flavivirus antiserum on postmortem tissue of horse HS101/08. Magnification ×1,000.
Figure 2Maximum-likelihood comparison of the partial NS5 gene of West Nile virus (WNV) strains identified in horses in South Africa in 2008 with representative sequences of other WNV lineages. Bootstrap statistics are shown on the branches; only values >70% are included. Scale bar indicates 0.07 nt changes. Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) was used as an outgroup. Black diamonds, WNV strains identified in horses in South Africa in the present study; white diamonds, WNV strains isolated from humans in South Africa in previous years. WNV strains and accession numbers and origin: HS123_08, FJ464376, South Africa; HS125_08, FJ464377, South Africa; HS101_08, FJ464378, South Africa; SAE126_08, FJ464379, South Africa; SAE134_08, FJ464380, South Africa; SA381_00, EF429199, South Africa; SA93_01, EF429198, South Africa; SPU116_89, EF429197, South Africa; goshawk_Hungary_04, DQ116961, Hungary; B956 polyprotein gene-1937, AY532665, Uganda; B956 117B3, M12294, Uganda; ArD76104, DQ318019, Senegal; H442, EF429200, South Africa; ArB3573_82, DQ318020, Central African Republic; Sarafend, AY688948, Uganda; Madagascar AnMg798, DQ176636, Madagascar; PTRoxo, AM404308, Portugal; Egypt101, AF260968, Egypt; EthAn4766, AY603654, Ethiopia; Kunjin MRM61C, D00256, Australia; WNV Italy 1998 equine, AF404757, Italy; WNV Ast02–2-25, DQ374653, Russia; LEIV-Vlg00–27924, AY278442, Russia; LEIV-Krnd88–190, AY277251, Russia; goose_Hungary_03, DQ118127, Hungary; NY385_99, DQ211652 NY, USA; NY99-eqhs, AF260967 NY, USA; NY99-flamingo382–99, AF196835 NY, USA; TYP9376 NY385_99, AY848697 NY, USA; WNV TX 2002 02, DQ164206 TX, USA; TM171_03, AY371271, Mexico; Mex03, AY660002, Mexico; TX 2002-HC, DQ176637 TX, USA; WNV804994, DQ256376, India; Rabensburg 97–103, AY765264, Czech Republic; JEV JaOAr5982, M18370, Japan.
Figure 3Maximum-likelihood analysis of the E-protein region of a West Nile virus isolate, HS101_08 (black diamond), recovered from horses in 2008 compared with isolates obtained from humans and animals from South Africa and other regions of the world. Nucleotide differences between lineage 2 strains included in the alignment are shown in the summarized alignment below the tree, indicating only unique nucleotides. Vertical numbers above the alignment indicate the position of each variable site on the gene fragment. Scale bar indicates nucleotide substitutions per site.