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BVDV in Australian alpacas: Natural infection and clinical profiles following co-mingling with a persistently infected heifer.

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-11, 23:27 authored by Caitlin Evans, E Erregger, F Hemmatzadeh, PD Cockcroft
BACKGROUND: Although predominantly a disease of cattle, bovine viral diarrhoea virus (BVDV) is known to infect other ruminant and camelid species such as sheep and alpacas. The aims of this study were to determine if BVDV-naive alpacas would become acutely infected and seroconvert to the predominant Australian strain of BVDV following co-mingling with a BVDV-1c persistently infected (PI) heifer and to determine what, if any, clinical signs, haematological responses and selected biochemical changes occur with acute BVDV-1c infections in alpacas. METHODS: A PI heifer and four alpacas co-mingled for 2 weeks. Weekly blood samples were collected and twice weekly clinical examinations were performed on the alpacas. RESULTS: Serum analysis by antibody ELISA indicated that all four alpacas were positive for BVDV-specific antibodies between 35 and 54 days after mixing with the BVDV-1c PI heifer. Viral antigen was detected by antigen ELISA in two alpacas on days 21 and 35 after initial mixing. In general, all the physical clinical parameters measured were normal. Serum biochemical and haematological analyses in two of the alpacas revealed marginally low sodium, chloride and elevated potassium concentrations, a lymphocytosis, monocytosis and a neutrophilia at some point during the study period in either one or both of the alpacas. CONCLUSION: This study showed that infection in Australian alpacas readily occurs when a BVDV-1c PI bovine co-mingles with naive alpacas and that acute infections are clinically mild and undetectable without serological testing.

History

Volume

96

Issue

7

Start Page

262

End Page

268

Number of Pages

7

eISSN

1751-0813

ISSN

0005-0423

Location

England

Publisher

Wiley

Language

eng

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2017-05-30

External Author Affiliations

University of Adelaide

Author Research Institute

  • Institute for Future Farming Systems

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Print

Journal

Australian Veterinary Journal