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      Generalized fatal Cowpox virus infection in a cat with transmission to a human contact case.

      Zoonoses and Public Health
      Animals, Cat Diseases, transmission, Cats, Cowpox, pathology, veterinary, Cowpox virus, isolation & purification, pathogenicity, DNA, Viral, Fatal Outcome, Female, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, Male, Species Specificity, Zoonoses

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          Abstract

          A 4-month-old female domestic shorthair cat was infected by a virus of the Poxvirus family. The animal developed a severe pneumonia and generalized ulcerating lesions of the skin. Histologically, typical eosinophilic intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies indicative of an Orthopoxvirus (OPV) infection were present. The lung showed grey-white to haemorrhagic nodular lesions with a central zone of complete necrosis of alveolar and bronchial tissue. Electron microscopy from skin and lung nodules revealed typical square-shaped OPV particles. Cultivation of the virus on chorio-allantoic membranes of embryonated chicken eggs resulted in haemorrhagic plaques. Restriction enzyme analysis, PCR and sequencing of the D8L gene identified the OPV isolate as a typical Cowpox virus. It was transmitted by the cat to a human contact person who developed a local nodular dermatitis at the inoculation site in association with signs of general infection and had an increase of OPV-specific neutralizing antibodies in paired serum samples.

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