| Literature DB >> 26853457 |
Karin E Darpel1,2, James Barber1, Andrew Hope1,3, Anthony J Wilson1, Simon Gubbins1, Mark Henstock1, Lorraine Frost1, Carrie Batten1, Eva Veronesi1,4, Katy Moffat1, Simon Carpenter1, Chris Oura1,5, Philip S Mellor1, Peter P C Mertens1.
Abstract
Bluetongue virus (BTV) is an economically important arbovirus of ruminants that is transmitted by Culicoides spp. biting midges. BTV infection of ruminants results in a high viraemia, suggesting that repeated sharing of needles between animals could result in its iatrogenic transmission. Studies defining the risk of iatrogenic transmission of blood-borne pathogens by less invasive routes, such as subcutaneous or intradermal inoculations are rare, even though the sharing of needles is common practice for these inoculation routes in the veterinary sector. Here we demonstrate that BTV can be transmitted by needle sharing during subcutaneous inoculation, despite the absence of visible blood contamination of the needles. The incubation period, measured from sharing of needles, to detection of BTV in the recipient sheep or cattle, was substantially longer than has previously been reported after experimental infection of ruminants by either direct inoculation of virus, or through blood feeding by infected Culicoides. Although such mechanical transmission is most likely rare under field condition, these results are likely to influence future advice given in relation to sharing needles during veterinary vaccination campaigns and will also be of interest for the public health sector considering the risk of pathogen transmission during subcutaneous inoculations with re-used needles.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26853457 PMCID: PMC4745043 DOI: 10.1038/srep20627
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1BTV RNA detection by rRT-PCR in blood of donor and recipient ruminants.
Panel (a) BTV RNA was detected in all donor sheep (inoculated subcutaneously with 1 ml tissue culture supernatant (TCS) containing 107 TCID50/ml of BTV-8KC2) by 3 days post infection (representing the first sampling day). On days marked with NS, either subcutaneous or intradermal inoculations were carried out using a shared needle between donors and recipients. These days (D5-D9 post infection) correlated with the days of highest donor RNAaemia (red box). BTV RNA was detected in recipient SC1 at 14 days post needle sharing (dpns) as counted from the first needle sharing attempt. All other recipient sheep, subcutaneous or intradermal, remained negative until the end of the study. Panel (b) The donor cattle (inoculated subcutaneously with 1 ml tissue culture supernatant (TCS) containing 107 TCID50/ml of BTV8-KC2) had detectable level of BTV RNA in systemic blood by 2 days post infection (the first day of sample analysis). Subcutaneous inoculations by shared needle were carried out between D7-D10 post infection, again correlating with highest donor BTV RNA level (red box). Recipient 3 tested positive for BTV RNA in the blood at 21 dpns, while all other recipient cattle remained negative until the end of the study.(D1 = Day 1 post infection; NS = needle sharing; dpns = days post needle sharing).
Viral titres detected in the blood of BTV-8 infected donor animals on days post infection indicating the highest load of viral RNA as determined by rRT-PCR.
| Donor ID | Day p.i./ day of needle sharing | Cq -value | Virus titre on KC cells/ TCID50/ml |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sheep D1 | D5 p.i./D1 | 23.57 | 105 |
| D6 p.i./D2 | 23.18 | 105 | |
| Sheep D2 | D5 p.i./D1 | 20.31 | 106 |
| D6 p.i./D2 | 19.11 | 106.25 | |
| Sheep D3 | D5 p.i./D1 | 25 | 105.25 |
| D6 p.i./D2 | 23.95 | 104.5 | |
| Cattle D | D8 p.i./D2 | 21.48 | 104.75 |
| D10 p.i./D4 | 22.26 | 105.5 |
Donor and recipient sheep combinations for subcutaneous and intradermal inoculation via shared needles.
| Recipient animal numbers | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3 | Day 4 | Day 5 | |
| Donor 1 | SC-1 | ID-2 | SC-4 | SC-1 | ID-2 |
| SC-2 | ID-3 | ID-1 | SC-2 | ID-3 | |
| SC-3 | SC-3 | ||||
| Donor 2 | SC-4 | SC-1 | ID-2 | SC-4 | SC-1 |
| ID-1 | SC-2 | ID-3 | ID-1 | SC-2 | |
| SC-3 | SC-3 | ||||
| Donor 3 | ID-2 | SC-4 | SC-1 | ID-2 | SC-4 |
| ID-3 | ID-1 | SC-2 | ID-3 | ID-1 | |
| SC-3 | |||||