Abstract: | Myocarditis was produced in seronegative five-day-old pups by oral and by intraperitoneal inoculation of canine parvovirus. The disease was subclinical. Histologic lesions were compatible with, but less extensive than, those seen in naturally occurring canine parvoviral myocarditis. In pups necropsied 23 days after inoculation, scattered cardiac myocytes contained intranuclear inclusion bodies, and virus-infected myocytes were demonstrated by immunofluorescence. Degeneration and loss of cardiac myocytes usually was not associated with a cellular infiltrate. At 51 days after inoculation, the myocardium contained an extensive lymphocytic infiltrate which was sometimes associated with fragmented myocytes, and was often contiguous with areas of interstitial fibrosis. At 108 days after inoculation, inflammatory lesions had regressed, and there were multifocal areas of myocardial fibrosis. |