| Literature DB >> 23202500 |
Abstract
Feline leukemia virus (FeLV) and feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) are retroviruses with global impact on the health of domestic cats. The two viruses differ in their potential to cause disease. FeLV is more pathogenic, and was long considered to be responsible for more clinical syndromes than any other agent in cats. FeLV can cause tumors (mainly lymphoma), bone marrow suppression syndromes (mainly anemia), and lead to secondary infectious diseases caused by suppressive effects of the virus on bone marrow and the immune system. Today, FeLV is less commonly diagnosed than in the previous 20 years; prevalence has been decreasing in most countries. However, FeLV importance may be underestimated as it has been shown that regressively infected cats (that are negative in routinely used FeLV tests) also can develop clinical signs. FIV can cause an acquired immunodeficiency syndrome that increases the risk of opportunistic infections, neurological diseases, and tumors. In most naturally infected cats, however, FIV itself does not cause severe clinical signs, and FIV-infected cats may live many years without any health problems. This article provides a review of clinical syndromes in progressively and regressively FeLV-infected cats as well as in FIV-infected cats.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23202500 PMCID: PMC3509668 DOI: 10.3390/v4112684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Stages of feline leukemia virus (FeLV)infection
| Stages of FeLV infection | FeLV p27 antigen in blood | Virus blood culture | Viral RNA in blood | Viral DNA in blood | Viral tissue culture | Viral shedding | FeLV-associated disease |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Positive | Positive | Positive | Positive | Positive | Positive | Likely |
|
| Negative | Negative | Negative | Positive | Negative | Negative | Unlikely |
|
| Negative | Negative | Negative | Negative | Negative | Negative | Unlikely |
|
| Variable | Variable | Variable | Variable | Positive | Variable | Unlikely |
Comparison of clinical signs and their main pathomechanism in feline leukemia virus-(FeLV-) infected and feline immunodeficiency virus-(FIV-) infected cats
| Clinical syndrome | FeLV | FIV |
|---|---|---|
|
| 62-times as likely as in non-infected cats, direct role of FeLV, mainly T-cell lymphoma | 5-times as likely as in non-infected cats, indirect role of FIV, mainly B-cell lymphoma |
|
| common, anemia, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, pancytopenia, primary infection of bone marrow precursor cells and stroma cells | rare, mainly neutropenia, soluble factors inhibiting bone marrow function |
|
| rare, direct influence of the virus, lymphoma and neurotoxic effects (of FeLV envelope glycoprotein) | rare, direct influence of the virus (specific FIV strains), impairment of astrocyte function |
|
| common, several mechanisms, e.g., replication of virus in all bone marrow cells (including neutrophils), changes in cytokine pattern | common, several mechanisms, e.g., decrease in CD4+ cells, changes in cytokine pattern |
|
| rare, e.g., immune-mediated hemolytic anemia | sometimes, hyperglobulinemia common with immune complex deposition leading to e.g., glomerulonephritis and uveitis |
|
| common, multi-factorial disease | very common, multi-factorial disease |