PMID: 8592796Nov 1, 1995Paper

The lesions of rotavirus infection in 1- and 10-day-old gnotobiotic calves

Veterinary Pathology
K C VarshneyG A Hall

Abstract

Age-related resistance to rotavirus disease has been described with some rotaviruses. In the present study, we investigated age-related resistance to rotavirus disease by defining extent of intestinal infection, virus replication, and severity of intestinal lesions in groups of three 1- and 10-day-old gnotobiotic calves of mixed breed inoculated orally with a cloned bovine rotavirus of low virulence for calves (strain C3-160) and in two groups of three uninoculated control calves of mixed breed. One-day-old calves inoculated with rotavirus developed diarrhea 26 hours after inoculation, and their feces contained 10(8.5)-10(9.2) TCID50/g feces; inoculated 10-day-old calves did not develop diarrhea, virus excretion commenced on the second or third day after inoculation, and peak concentrations of virus in feces were 10(5.7)-10(7.9) TCID50/g feces. Calves were euthanatized within 8-30 hours after the attainment of peak virus shedding while they were still shedding virus at peak levels. The mean percentage of small intestinal epithelium that was immunostained for rotavirus was three times greater in 1-day-old calves than in 10-day-old calves, and the large intestine was infected more extensively in 1-day-old calves. Immunostaining f...Continue Reading

References

Jul 1, 1978·The Journal of General Virology·M S McNulty
Nov 1, 1977·Journal of Clinical Pathology·A FergusonF Allan
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