| Literature DB >> 31094626 |
Diane Addie1, Lene Houe2, Kirsty Maitland1, Giuseppe Passantino3, Nicola Decaro3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) is caused by infection with feline coronavirus (FCoV). FCoV is incredibly contagious and transmission is via the faecal-oral route. FCoV infection, and therefore FIP, is most common in breeder and rescue catteries, where many cats are kept indoors, using litter trays. Whether it is possible to break the cycle of FCoV infection and reinfection using cat litters has never been investigated. The aim of the study was to examine the effect of cat litters on FCoV infectivity and virus load in multi-cat households, and transmission frequency.Entities:
Keywords: Bentonite; Dr Elsey; FCoV infection; FIP; Feline coronavirus; Fuller’s earth; cat litter; feline infectious peritonitis; reducing virus load; virus inhibition
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31094626 PMCID: PMC8685581 DOI: 10.1177/1098612X19848167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Feline Med Surg ISSN: 1098-612X Impact factor: 2.015
Effect of cat litters on ability of feline coronavirus (FCoV) to infect cell culture
| Cat litter | Litter type | Cytotoxicity | FCoV titre/ ml |
|---|---|---|---|
| Virus control (no litter) | NA | NA | 106 |
| Ever Clean Less Track (Clorox International) | Fuller’s earth | No | 0 |
| Tesco Value (Tesco) | Fuller’s earth | No | 0 |
| LitterPurrfect (imported by Costco UK) | Fuller’s earth | No | 0 |
| Cat Country USA (Mountain Meadows Pet Products) | Compressed wheat grass | No | 0 |
| Sophisticat (Steetley) | Fuller’s earth | No | 10 |
| Wood-based cat litter (Pets at Home) | Wood pellets | No | 102 |
| Catsan (Masterfoods) | Softwood granules | No | 102 |
| Snowflake (Ashton-under-Lyne) | Wood pellets | No | 102 |
| World’s Best Original (Grain Processing Company) | Whole-kernel corn | No | 10[ |
| Tesco Premium (Tesco) | Recycled paper and clay | No | 104 |
| Nutrena Nature (USA) | Chicken feed | No | 104 |
| World’s Best Extra (Grain Processing Company) | Whole-kernel corn | No | 10[ |
| Litter Pearls (Crystal Clear Pet Products) | Silica gel | No | 10[ |
| Cat Country UK (Mountain Meadows Pet Products) | Compressed wheat grass | No | 106 |
| Cat Country Europe (Mountain Meadows Pet Products) | Compressed wheat grass | No | 106 |
The reduction of FCoV infectivity for cell culture in the supernatant of various cat litters is shown, in decreasing effect against the virus. The titre of the virus inoculum was 106/ml: four cat litters caused the virus titre to reduce to 0 (ie, prevented infection of the cell culture), eight litters and the chicken feed reduced the FCoV titre to varying extents, and two litters had no effect on virus titre. None of the products tested were toxic to the cell culture
NA = not applicable
Figure 1(a) Percentage of cats shedding feline coronavirus (FCoV) on crossover trial of cat litters A, X and Y in household H. (b) Percentage of FCoV-positive samples on crossover trial of cat litters B, X and Y in household L. Cats in households H and L were sampled on various occasions while using control cat litters A and B (white bars) and test litters X and Y (black and grey bars, respectively). This figure shows that the percentage of cats shedding FCoV was lower on cat litter X when compared with litters A, B or Y in a crossover study involving two households, H and L. It can be seen that the percentage of cats shedding FCoV decreased in both households when cat litter X was introduced, increased when the cat litter was changed from X to Y, then decreased again on litter X in both households. The difference between cat litters X and A was statistically significant (P <0.05), but the difference between X and B was not (P >0.05). Cat litter Y was not significantly different from litters A or B (P >0.05). All of the cat litters were Fuller’s earth based, but cat litter X was formulated to be dust-free and so to track less. The possibility that the reduction in virus shedding was related to summertime, as opposed to the cat litter, could not be excluded