Keratouveitis in juvenile dogs and its presumed association with canine adenovirus infection

Author:

Joyce Hannah12ORCID,Oliver James A. C.12,Fricker Georgina2,Weir Willie3,Fleming Lorraine12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ophthalmology, Centre for Small Animal Studies Animal Health Trust Newmarket UK

2. Department of Ophthalmology, Dick White Referrals Part of Linnaeus Veterinary Limited Cambridgeshire UK

3. School of Biodiversity, One Health and Veterinary Medicine University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveWe hypothesized that keratouveitis still occurs despite current widespread use of Canine adenovirus (CAV)‐2 vaccinations and assessed the utility of CAV‐1 and CAV‐2 titers in elucidation of its etiopathogenesis.Animals studiedNine dogs with unexplained keratouveitis (14 eyes) and nine control dogs.ProceduresThe Animal Health Trust clinical database was searched between 2008 and 2018 to identify cases of keratouveitis. Inclusion criteria included known vaccination status, interval from vaccination to development of clinical signs and availability of CAV titers. Cases were excluded if they were older than 1 year of age, or other causative ocular pathology for corneal edema was identified. Nine age‐matched dogs without corneal edema but with CAV titers were included as controls.ResultsMean CAV‐1 and CAV‐2 titers were not statistically different between dogs with keratouveitis and controls (p = .16 and p = .76, respectively). Three cases had CAV‐1 titers >5000 and two of these cases had rising convalescence titers (greater than an 11‐fold increase) suggesting infection with wild‐type CAV‐1. The six other cases did not appear to be associated with CAV infection or vaccination.ConclusionKeratouveitis continues to occur despite the advent of CAV‐2 vaccinations. While this study found no evidence to indicate CAV‐2 vaccination causes keratouveitis, the data indicates that in a proportion of cases, contemporaneous wild‐type CAV‐1 infection is a possible cause.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Veterinary

Reference12 articles.

1. The 'blue eye' phenomenon

2. Cross‐protective immunity to canine adenovirus type 2 by canine adenovirus type 1 vaccination;Emery JB;Am J Vet Res,1978

3. CabassoVJ.Infectious canine hepatitis [virus foxes dogs and skunks].Infectious Diseases of Wild Mammals.1981. 191(4). Accessed January 19 2022.https://agris.fao.org/agris‐search/search.do?recordID=US19830856904

4. SykesJE.Infectious canine hepatitis.Canine and Feline Infectious Diseases.2014. 182(4).

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