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  • Cats: Influenza Virus Type A Serosurvey




    <!-- header_starts_here //-->Emerging Infectious Diseases

    <!-- header_ends_here //-->
    <!-- content_starts_here //--> <!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="Article Content" --> Volume 13, Number 4–April 2007

    Letter

    Influenza Virus Type A Serosurvey in Cats

    Saverio Paltrinieri,* Valentina Spagnolo,* Alessia Giordano,* Ana Moreno Martin,† and Andrea Luppi†
    *University of Milan, Milan, Italy; and †Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale della Lombardia e dell'Emilia, Brescia, Italy
    Suggested citation for this article
    To the Editor: Recent reports of cats positive for H5N1 type A influenza virus (1) raised the hypothesis that cats might have an epidemiologic role in this disease. Experimental findings seem to support this hypothesis. Experimentally infected cats might act as aberrant hosts (as do humans and other mammals), with symptoms and lesions developing and the virus subsequently spreading to other cats (2,3). The experimental conditions under which this occurs, however, can rarely be observed for domestic or wild cats. No spontaneous cases of transmission from cat to cat or cat to mammal have been reported, and scientifically validated reports about spontaneous disease in cats are rare (4–6). Reports about cats with circulating influenza virus antibodies are even more rare and occur in unusual epidemiologic situations (7). The true susceptibility of cats to type A influenza viruses in field conditions thus remains to be elucidated.

    Based on the assumption that partially susceptible animals should mount an antibody response, we investigated the possible presence of antibodies against the nucleocapsid protein A (NPA), a common antigen of type A influenza viruses, expressed by both avian and human strains (8), in feline serum samples stored at the University of Milan and collected from 1999 to 2005. Only samples for which complete information regarding the cat (owned vs. free-roaming) and its health status were included in the study. Cats were grouped as healthy or sick on the basis of clinical signs; a complete clinicopathologic screening that included routine hematologic tests, clinical biochemical tests, and serum protein electrophoresis; serologic tests for feline immunodeficiency virus and feline leukemia virus infection, which are known to induce immunosuppression; and information regarding the follow-up, including postmortem examination for dead animals. Specifically, 196 serum samples satisfied the inclusion criteria in terms of anamnestic information about the sampled cat and, according to the above-mentioned diagnostic approach, cats were grouped as reported in the Table. Owned cats were mainly living in the urban area of Milan. By contrast, approximately half of the free-roaming cats included came from rescue shelters from a rural area northwest of Milan. Sixty samples (58.8%) from owned cats and 51 samples (54.2%) from free-roaming cats were collected from September to February, when seasonal human influenza peaks.

    Serologic tests for antibodies to type A influenza virus were performed with a competitive ELISA to detect NPA antibodies (9). Negative control serum from specific-pathogen-free chickens and positive control serum specimens from different species (avian, swine, and equine) were included in each plate to provide a full range of controls. Serum samples were considered positive when the absorbance value was reduced to at least 75% compared with 100% for negative control wells.

    All cats were negative for type A influenza virus antibodies. The ELISA we used has been validated in several species, including humans (9). Antibodies against NPA are not a major response to influenza infection but likely would have been detected if infections of cat were widespread. Thus, although no positive feline serum samples were used as positive controls, the negative results are not likely false negatives. Indeed, the negative results of many cats included in the study (the free-roaming ones, especially those affected by severe illness, for which a natural cat/flu virus interaction is unrealistic) might be due to low exposure to the virus because avian influenza outbreaks never occurred in the sampling area included in this study (10). By contrast, many owned cats (those sampled during the winter) likely were exposed to human type A influenza viruses, since approximately half of the viruses responsible for human seasonal influenza isolated in Europe, especially in Italy, are type A (8,10). The close contact between pets and their owners probably exposed cats to these viruses; nevertheless, none of the pet cats seroconverted, even when they had severe systemic diseases or viral induced immunosuppression. Although the number of cats in this study might be statistically insufficient to show low seroprevalences, our results further support the hypothesis that, in field conditions, cats are most probably not susceptible to type A influenza viruses, especially to the human ones (e.g., H3N2, the most diffused among humans, which also did not induced symptoms or lesions in experimental conditions [2]) circulating in the "pre-cat flu era." In futures studies, these results can be used to compare the results of seroepidemiologic investigations among cats living in sites contaminated by avian viruses.
    This work was supported by the University of Milan grant F.I.R.S.T.
    References
    1. Hopp M. Germany: H5N1 in domestic cats. ProMed. 2006 Mar 1. [cited 2006 Mar 1]. Available from www.promedmail.org, archive no: 20060301.0656.
    2. Kuiken T, Rimmelzwaan G, van Riel D, van Amerongen G, Baars M, Fouchier R, et al. Avian H5N1 influenza in cats. Science. 2004;306:241.
    3. van Riel D, Munster VJ, de Wit E, Rimmelzwaan GF, Fouchier RA, Osterhaus AD, et al. H5N1 Virus attachment to lower respiratory tract. Science. 2006;312:399.
    4. Paniker CK, Nair CM. Infection with A2 Hong Kong influenza virus in domestic cats. Bull World Health Organ. 1970;43:859–62.
    5. Butler D. Can cats spread avian flu? Nature. 2006;440:135.
    6. Songsermn T, Amonsin A, Jam-on R, Sae-Heng N, Meemak N, Pariyothorn N, et al. Avian influenza H5N1 in naturally infected domestic cat. Emerg Infect Dis. 2006;12:681–3.
    7. Butler D. Thai dogs carry bird-flu virus, but will they spread it? Nature. 2006;439:773.
    8. Eurosurveillance.org. [homepage on the Internet]. Stockholm. European Center for Disease Prevention and Control. [cited 2006 Apr 13]. Available from www.eurosurveillance.org
    9. De Boer GF, Back W, Osterhaus AD. An ELISA for detection of antibodies against influenza A nucleoprotein in humans and various animal species. Arch Virol. 1990;115:47–61.
    10. Capua I, Marangon S. Avian influenza in Italy (1999–2000): a review. Avian Pathol. 2000;29:289–94.
    Table

    Influenza Virus Type A Serosurvey in Cats, Table | CDC EID
    Suggested Citation for this Article

    Paltrinieri S, Spagnolo V, Giordano A, Moreno Martin A, Luppi A. Influenza virus type A serosurvey in cats [letter]. Emerg Infect Dis [serial on the Internet]. 2007 Apr [date cited]. Available from http://www.cdc.gov/EID/content/13/4/06-0736.htm

    Comments to the Authors
    Please use the form below to submit correspondence to the authors or contact them at the following address:
    Saverio Paltrinieri, University of Milan, Department of Veterinary Pathology, Hygiene and Public Health, Via Celoria 10, Milan, Italy 20133; email: saverio.paltrinieri@unimi.it
    Please note: To prevent email errors, please use no web addresses, email addresses, HTML code, or the characters <, >, and @ in the body of your message.

    <!-- InstanceEndEditable --> <!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="Date Stamp" --> This page posted February 28, 2007
    This page last reviewed March 22, 2007
    <!-- InstanceEndEditable --> <!-- content_ends_here //-->

    Page Located on the Web at http://www.cdc.gov/eid/content/13/4/662.htm


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    Last edited by Niko; March 24, 2007, 12:54 AM. Reason: formatting
    "In the beginning of change, the patriot is a scarce man (or woman https://flutrackers.com/forum/core/i...ilies/wink.png), and brave, and hated and scorned. When his cause succeeds, the timid join him, for it then costs nothing to be a patriot."- Mark TwainReason obeys itself; and ignorance submits to whatever is dictated to it. -Thomas Paine

  • #2
    Re: Cats: Influenza Virus Type A Serosurvey

    Interesting....

    The close contact between pets and their owners probably exposed cats to these viruses; nevertheless, none of the pet cats seroconverted, even when they had severe systemic diseases or viral induced immunosuppression. Although the number of cats in this study might be statistically insufficient to show low seroprevalences, our results further support the hypothesis that, in field conditions, cats are most probably not susceptible to type A influenza viruses, especially to the human ones.....
    So can we conclude that the Indonesian H5N1-positive cats became infected from eating H5N1-carrying food (e.g., rodents)? Or licking their paws after a dash though the henhouse or backyard flock area?

    It might be interesting to put an Influenza A-infected or asymptomatic Influenza A-carrying feline in close contact with a mammal with human-similar characteristics (say a mink) and see if the mink becomes infected.

    .
    "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Cats: Influenza Virus Type A Serosurvey

      Maybe not so hypothetical after today's death in Indonesia, eh?

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Cats: Influenza Virus Type A Serosurvey

        no mention of the tigers, where we had lots of T2T ?
        the Rimmelzwaan/Kuiken study also had C2C
        I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
        my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Cats: Influenza Virus Type A Serosurvey

          Originally posted by scottmcpherson View Post
          Maybe not so hypothetical after today's death in Indonesia, eh?
          For those who missed it, see this post:


          Casualties's uncle, Adam, 49, said in the leased house parents of casualties, there were no poultry that was maintained.
          However that he knew, this house maintained enough cats.
          "Mungkin had approximately ten cats that were maintained by this family.

          Indeed only village cats, but if maintaining the poultry in the house or near the house was thought by me not ada," obviously him.
          "In the beginning of change, the patriot is a scarce man (or woman https://flutrackers.com/forum/core/i...ilies/wink.png), and brave, and hated and scorned. When his cause succeeds, the timid join him, for it then costs nothing to be a patriot."- Mark TwainReason obeys itself; and ignorance submits to whatever is dictated to it. -Thomas Paine

          Comment

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