| Literature DB >> 31538556 |
J Scott Weese, Maureen E C Anderson, Yohannes Berhane, Kathleen F Doyle, Christian Leutenegger, Roxanne Chan, Michelle Chiunti, Katerina Marchildon, Nicole Dumouchelle, Theresa DeGelder, Kiera Murison, Catherine Filejksi, Davor Ojkic.
Abstract
Canine influenza virus (CIV) A(H3N2) was identified in 104 dogs in Ontario, Canada, during December 28, 2017-October 30, 2018, in distinct epidemiologic clusters. High morbidity rates occurred within groups of dogs, and kennels and a veterinary clinic were identified as foci of infection. Death attributable to CIV infection occurred in 2 (2%) of 104 diagnosed cases. A combination of testing of suspected cases, contact tracing and testing, and 28-day isolation of infected dogs was used, and CIV transmission was contained in each outbreak. Dogs recently imported from Asia were implicated as the source of infection. CIV H3N2 spread rapidly within groups in this immunologically naive population; however, containment measures were apparently effective, demonstrating the potential value of prompt diagnosis and implementation of CIV control measures.Entities:
Keywords: Canada; Ontario; canine diseases; canine influenza virus A(H3N2); infection control; infectious disease outbreaks; influenza; viruses
Year: 2019 PMID: 31538556 PMCID: PMC6759272 DOI: 10.3201/eid2510.190196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Approximate locations and number of dogs with diagnoses of canine influenza virus infection, Ontario, Canada, 2017–2018.
Figure 2Time series of canine influenza diagnoses in clusters 3a and 3b, Ontario, Canada, 2017–2018. Transmission events within households are not depicted.
Figure 3Suspected transmission pathways for canine influenza cluster 3a, Ontario, Canada, 2017–2018. Numbers in each box denote the number of confirmed (PCR positive) CIV infections.
Figure 4Suspected transmission pathways for canine influenza cluster 3b, Ontario, Canada, 2017–2018. Numbers in each box denote the number of confirmed (PCR positive) CIV infections.