Literature detail

Experimental infection of horses with Hendra virus/Australia/horse/2008/Redlands.

Glenn A Marsh1 Jessica Haining Timothy J Hancock Rachel Robinson Adam J Foord Jennifer A Barr Shane Riddell Hans G Heine John R White Gary Crameri Hume E Field Lin-Fa Wang Deborah Middleton
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization Livestock Industries, Geelong, Victoria, Australia. [email protected]
PMID 22172152 2011 Emerg Infect Dis eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

Hendra virus (HeV) is a highly pathogenic zoonotic paramyxovirus harbored by Australian flying foxes with sporadic spillovers directly to horses. Although the mode and critical control points of HeV spillover to horses from flying foxes, and the risk for transmission from infected horses to other horses and humans, are poorly understood, we successfully established systemic HeV disease in 3 horses exposed to Hendra virus/Australia/Horse/2008/Redlands by the oronasal route, a plausible route for natural infection. In 2 of the 3 animals, HeV RNA was detected continually in nasal swabs from as early as 2 days postexposure, indicating that systemic spread of the virus may be preceded by local viral replication in the nasal cavity or nasopharynx. Our data suggest that a critical factor for reducing HeV exposure risk to humans includes early consideration of HeV in the differential diagnosis and institution of appropriate infection control procedures.

Hendra Virus Animals Australia Chiroptera Communicable Diseases, Emerging Female Henipavirus Infections Horse Diseases Horses Humans Queensland Viral Load Virus Replication Virus Shedding Zoonoses

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

2 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.98
Key finding

Experimental oronasal inoculation of horses with the Hendra virus/Australia/Horse/2008/Redlands strain resulted in systemic infection and nasal viral replication and shedding.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We successfully established systemic HeV disease in 3 horses exposed to Hendra virus/Australia/Horse/2008/Redlands by the oronasal route, a plausible route for natural infection. In 2 of the 3 animals, HeV RNA was detected continually in nasal swabs from as early as 2 days postexposure, indicating that systemic spread of the virus may be preceded by local viral replication in the nasal cavity or nasopharynx.

Method
experimental infection; oronasal exposure; virus replication assay
Sample type
nasal swabs
Experimental system
in vivo animal experiment
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Hendra virus was shown to spill over naturally from flying foxes to horses in Australia, with experimental infection reproducing systemic disease consistent with this route.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Hendra virus (HeV) is a highly pathogenic zoonotic paramyxovirus harbored by Australian flying foxes with sporadic spillovers directly to horses. Although the mode and critical control points of HeV spillover to horses from flying foxes, and the risk for transmission from infected horses to other horses and humans, are poorly understood, we successfully established systemic HeV disease in 3 horses exposed to Hendra virus/Australia/Horse/2008/Redlands by the oronasal route.

Method
experimental infection; PCR
Study design
animal experiment
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
Australia
Country inferred
Australia