Author:
HAZEL S. M.,BENNETT M.,CHANTREY J.,BOWN K.,CAVANAGH R.,JONES T. R.,BAXBY D.,BEGON M.
Abstract
Cowpox is an orthopoxvirus infection endemic in European wild rodents, but with a wide host
range including human beings. In this longitudinal study we examined cowpox in two wild
rodent species, bank voles Clethrionomys glareolus and wood mice Apodemus sylvaticus, to
investigate the dynamics of a virus in its wild reservoir host. Trapping was carried out at
4-weekly intervals over 3 years and each animal caught was uniquely identified, blood sampled
and tested for antibodies to cowpox. Antibody prevalence was higher in bank voles than in
wood mice and seroconversion varied seasonally, with peaks in autumn. Infection was most
common in males of both species but no clear association with age was demonstrated. This
study provides a model for studying other zoonotic infections that derive from wild mammals
since other approaches, such as one-off samples, will fail to detect the variation in infection
and thus, risk to human health, demonstrated here.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
83 articles.
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