AI Article Synopsis

  • A study found neurotropic bovine astrovirus (BoAstV) in 19% of examined cattle with idiopathic lymphocytic encephalitis from 1988 to 2019, highlighting a previously undetected infection in cattle aged 4 months and older.
  • The majority of positive cases were in younger cattle (1-2 years old) and displayed acute neurologic symptoms shortly before death or euthanasia, with significant inflammation observed in the brain and spinal cord.
  • While other potential infectious causes were identified in some cases, 64% of the lymphocytic encephalitis cases remained without a known cause, indicating that BoAstV infections have been present for years but haven't increased in recent occurrences.

Article Abstract

Astroviruses have been found in cattle and other species with encephalitis. Our objective was to determine the frequency of neurotropic bovine astrovirus (BoAstV) in cases of encephalitis in cattle ≥ 4-mo-old. Of 56 cases of idiopathic lymphocytic encephalitis examined retrospectively (1988-2019), fixed brain from 11 cases (19%) tested positive by semi-quantitative RT-PCR for BoAstV CH13/NeuroS1. None of the control cases tested positive, including 32 with other forms of encephalitis and 40 with no neurologic disease. Most astrovirus-positive cases were 1-2-y-old, with a range of 7 mo to 7 y, and affected both beef and dairy breeds with wide geographic distribution. BoAstV-positive cases had acute onset of neurologic signs of 12 h to 7 d before death or euthanasia. Affected cattle had lymphocytic inflammation throughout the brain including cerebrum, thalamus, midbrain, cerebellum, medulla oblongata, and spinal cord, and affecting gray and white matter. Further PCR testing identified a possible cause in 9 of the 45 (20%) remaining idiopathic cases of lymphocytic encephalitis, including eastern equine encephalitis virus, , bovine viral diarrhea virus, bovine alphaherpesvirus 1, and ovine gammaherpesvirus 2 (malignant catarrhal fever); we found no cases of infection by West Nile virus, rabies virus, or spp. No cause was identified in 36 of 56 (64%) cases of lymphocytic encephalitis. We frequently identified neurotropic BoAstV in cases of lymphocytic encephalitis that had no previously identified cause. Neurotropic BoAstV infections had gone undetected for decades, but the frequency of BoAstV infections has not increased among contemporary cases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11110778PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10406387241237192DOI Listing

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