- Author:
Jing Feng YIN
1
;
Jin Ling WANG
1
;
Qing TANG
2
;
Yu Lin DING
1
;
Xiaoyan TAO
2
;
Hao LI
2
;
Miao SONG
2
;
Zhenyang GUO
2
;
Xin Xin SHEN
2
;
Guo Dong LIANG
3
;
Feng Long WANG
1
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords: Cow; Histopathology; Phylogeny; Rabies
- MeSH: Acetazolamide; Animals; Brain; pathology; Cattle; Cattle Diseases; epidemiology; pathology; Dog Diseases; diagnosis; epidemiology; Dogs; Mongolia; epidemiology; Nucleoproteins; genetics; Phylogeny; Rabies; epidemiology; veterinary; Rabies virus; genetics; Time Factors
- From: Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2014;27(1):35-44
- CountryChina
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo perform pathological observation and etiological identification of specimens collected from dairy cows, beef cattle and dogs which were suspected of rabies in Inner Mongolia in 2011, and analyze their etiological characteristics.
METHODSPathological observation was conducted on the brain specimens of three infected animals with Hematoxylin-Eosin staining, followed by confirmation using immunofluorescence and nested RT-PCR methods. Finally, phylogenetic analysis was conducted using the virus N gene sequence amplified from three specimens.
RESULTSEosinophilic and cytoplasmic inclusion bodies were seen in neuronal cells of the CNS; and rabies non-characteristic histopathological changes were also detected in the CNS. The three brain specimens were detected positive. N gene nucleotide sequence of these three isolates showed distinct sequence identity, therefore they fell into different groups in the phylogenetic analysis. N gene in the cow and dog had higher homology with that in Hebei isolate, but that in the beef cattle had higher homology with that in Mongolian lupine isolate and Russian red fox isolate.
CONCLUSIONRabies were observed in the dairy cow, beef cattle and canine in the farm in Inner Mongolia, in 2011, which led to a different etiologic characteristics of the epidemic situation.