Search
SectionsIndex
  • Behavior
  • Circulatory System
  • Clinical Pathology and Procedures
  • Digestive System
  • Emergency Medicine and Critical Care
  • Endocrine System
  • Exotic and Laboratory Animals
  • Eye and Ear
  • Generalized Conditions
  • Immune System
  • Integumentary System
  • Management and Nutrition
  • Metabolic Disorders
  • Musculoskeletal System
  • Nervous System
  • Pharmacology
  • Poultry
  • Reproductive System
  • Respiratory System
  • Toxicology
  • Urinary System
  • Zoonoses
ABCDEFGHI
JKLMNOPQR
STUVWXYZ
In This Topic
Generalized Conditions
Canine Herpesviral Infection
Overview of Canine Herpesviral Infection
Etiology and Pathogenesis
Clinical Findings
Lesions
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
Back to Top
Resources
  • About The Merck Veterinary Manual
  • Reference Guides
  • Multimedia
Manuals available online
'/home/index.html' + bookPageLink
 
'/vet/index.html'
These and other Manuals available
in print, online, and as mobile applications.

See more at MerckManuals.com
Sections in Veterinary Professionals
  • Behavior
  • Circulatory System
  • Clinical Pathology and Procedures
  • Digestive System
  • Emergency Medicine and Critical Care
  • Endocrine System
  • Exotic and Laboratory Animals
  • Eye and Ear
  • Generalized Conditions
  • Immune System
  • Integumentary System
  • Management and Nutrition
  • Metabolic Disorders
  • Musculoskeletal System
  • Nervous System
  • Pharmacology
  • Poultry
  • Reproductive System
  • Respiratory System
  • Toxicology
  • Urinary System
  • Zoonoses
Chapters in Generalized Conditions
  • Actinobacillosis
  • Actinomycosis
  • Amyloidosis
  • Anthrax
  • Besnoitiosis
  • Clostridial Diseases
  • Congenital and Inherited Anomalies
  • Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae Infection
  • Foot-and-Mouth Disease
  • Fungal Infections
  • Leptospirosis
  • Lightning Stroke and Electrocution
  • Listeriosis
  • Lyme Borreliosis
  • Melioidosis
  • Neosporosis
  • Nocardiosis
  • Peritonitis
  • Plague
  • Q Fever
  • Sweating Sickness
  • Toxoplasmosis
  • Tuberculosis and other Mycobacterial Infections
  • Tularemia
  • Vesicular Stomatitis
  • African Horse Sickness
  • Equine Granulocytic Ehrlichiosis
  • Equine Infectious Anemia
  • Equine Viral Arteritis
  • Glanders
  • Hendra Virus Infection
  • Sepsis in Foals
  • African Swine Fever
  • Classical Swine Fever
  • Edema Disease
  • Encephalomyocarditis Virus Infection
  • Glässer's Disease
  • Hemagglutinating Encephalomyelitis
  • Nipah Virus Infection
  • Porcine Circovirus Diseases
  • Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome
  • Streptococcal Infections in Pigs
  • Swine Vesicular Disease
  • Trichinellosis
  • Vesicular Exanthema of Swine
  • Bluetongue
  • Bovine Leukosis
  • Bovine Petechial Fever
  • Caprine Arthritis and Encephalitis
  • Colisepticemia
  • Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever
  • Ephemeral Fever
  • Heartwater
  • Histophilosis
  • Hemorrhagic Septicemia
  • Malignant Catarrhal Fever
  • Nairobi Sheep Disease
  • Paratuberculosis
  • Pasteurellosis of Sheep and Goats
  • Peste des Petits Ruminants
  • Rift Valley Fever
  • Rinderpest
  • Tickborne Fever
  • Tick Pyemia
  • Wesselsbron Disease
  • Canine Distemper
  • Canine Herpesviral Infection
  • Feline Infectious Peritonitis
  • Feline Leukemia Virus and Related Diseases
  • Feline Panleukopenia
  • Infectious Canine Hepatitis
  • Leishmaniosis
  • Rickettsial Diseases
Topics in Canine Herpesviral Infection
  • Overview of Canine Herpesviral Infection
         
        • Merck Manual
        • >
        • Veterinary Professionals
        • >
        • Generalized Conditions
        • >
        • Canine Herpesviral Infection
        • 4
         
        Overview of Canine Herpesviral Infection

        Share This

        Canine herpesvirus is a severe viral infection of puppies worldwide, which often has a 100% mortality rate in affected litters. It also may be associated with upper respiratory infection or a vesicular vaginitis or posthitis in adult dogs. As is typical of herpesviruses, recovery from clinical disease is associated with lifelong latent infection. Only canids (dogs, wolves, coyotes) are known to be susceptible.

        Etiology and Pathogenesis

        The disease is caused by an enveloped DNA canine herpesvirus (CHV) that is sensitive to lipid solvents (such as ether and chloroform) and most disinfectants. CHV is relatively unstable outside the host.

        Puppies are most susceptible in the first week of life, when they maintain a body temperature less than 37°C, because the virus replicates more successfully at this temperature. Transmission usually occurs by contact between susceptible puppies and the infected oral, nasal, or vaginal secretions of their dam or other dogs allowed to commingle with puppies during the first 3 wk of life. After this time, natural resistance to infection improves as puppies maintain a higher body temperature. In utero transmission may also occur.

        Infection of susceptible animals results in replication of CHV in the surface cells of the nasal mucosa, pharynx, and tonsils. In the case of newborn susceptible pups that become hypothermic, viremia and invasion of visceral organs occur.

        Clinical Findings

        Deaths due to CHV infection usually occur in puppies 1–3 wk old, occasionally in puppies up to 1 mo old, and rarely in pups as old as 6 mo. Typically, onset is sudden, and death occurs after an illness of ≤24 hr. If clinical signs are observed, they may include lethargy, decreased suckling, diarrhea, nasal discharge, erythematous rash, rarely oral or genital vesicles, and the notable absence of fever. Thoracic radiographs show a diffuse unstructured interstitial pattern, typical of viral pneumonia, but in contrast to other viral diseases of puppies, leukocytosis may be present.

        Older dogs exposed to or experimentally inoculated with CHV may develop a mild rhinitis, which may be part of the “kennel cough” syndrome (infectious tracheobronchitis, see Respiratory Diseases of Small Animals: Infectious Tracheobronchitis of Dogs) or a vesicular vaginitis or posthitis. There are also reports of corneal ulcers in the absence of other upper respiratory signs. In utero infections may be associated with abortions, stillbirths, and infertility.

        Lesions

        The characteristic gross lesions consist of disseminated focal necrosis and hemorrhages. The most pronounced lesions are seen in the lungs, cortical portion of the kidneys, adrenal glands, liver, and GI tract. All lymph nodes are enlarged and hyperemic, and the spleen is swollen. Lesions may also be found in the CNS. The basic histologic lesion is necrosis with hemorrhage in the adjacent parenchyma. Most often there is no inflammatory reaction. Single, small, basophilic, intranuclear inclusion bodies are most common in areas of necrosis in the lung, liver, and kidneys; occasionally, they are seen as faintly acidophilic bodies located within the nuclear space.

        Diagnosis

        CHV infection may be confused with infectious canine hepatitis (see Infectious Canine Hepatitis), but it is not accompanied by the thickened, edematous gallbladder often associated with the latter. The focal areas of necrosis and hemorrhage, especially those that occur in the kidneys, distinguish it from hepatitis and neosporosis (see Neosporosis). CHV causes serious disease only in very young puppies. The rapid death and characteristic lesions distinguish it from canine distemper (see Canine Distemper).

        Hemagglutination, ELISA, and immunofluorescence antibody tests are available, and PCR can identify viral DNA in fresh tissue and fluid samples. However, the diagnosis typically is made postmortem with virus isolation from fresh lung, liver, kidney, and spleen by cell culture techniques and subsequent identification by PCR and sequencing, transmission electron microscopy, immunofluorescence, or fluorescence in situ hybridization. The tissues should be submitted to the laboratory refrigerated but not frozen.

        Treatment

        Therapy is typically unrewarding in systemically affected puppies, and the prognosis for puppies that do survive is guarded because damage to lymphoid organs, brain, kidneys, and liver may be irreparable.

        Prior to onset of clinical signs in littermates or other nearby puppies, rearing in incubators at an elevated temperature (95°F [35°C], 50% relative humidity), and/or passive immunization with intraperitoneal serum may reduce losses within an exposed litter. Limited studies with antiviral agents such as vidarabine are inconclusive, but would require immediate recognition and immediate treatment to have any possibility of success.

        Prevention

        No vaccine is available in the USA. Infected bitches develop antibodies, and litters subsequent to the first infected litter receive maternal antibodies in the colostrum. Puppies that receive maternal antibodies may be infected with the virus, but disease does not result.

        Removing puppies from affected bitches by cesarean section and rearing them in isolation has prevented deaths under experimental conditions. However, infections have been noted even in puppies delivered by cesarean section, likely due to in utero transmission. In the natural setting, subsequent litters of infected dams are likely protected by maternal antibodies, so cesarean section in a bitch with a history of herpesvirus infection in a prior litter is not necessary.

        Last full review/revision March 2012 by Kate E. Creevy, DVM, MS, DACVIM

        Buy the Book

        Back to Top

        Previous: Overview of Canine Distemper

        Next: Overview of Feline Infectious Peritonitis

        Audio
        Figures
        Photographs
        Sidebars
        Tables
        Videos

        Copyright     © 2010-2013 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Whitehouse Station, N.J., U.S.A.    Privacy    Terms of Use