Pathogenesis of marble spleen disease in bursectomized and non-bursectomized ring-necked pheasants following oral inoculation with cell-culture-propagated virus. |
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Authors: | S D Fitzgerald W M Reed |
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Affiliation: | Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, School of Veterinary Medicine, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907. |
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Abstract: | Seventy-two 13-week-old ring-necked pheasants were inoculated orally with 5.0 x 10(2) tissue-culture infective dose (TCID) of cell-culture-propagated marble spleen disease virus. Inoculated birds exhibited neither mortality nor clinical disease. Gross and histologic lesions were typical of marble spleen disease. The mean splenic weight was significantly (P less than 0.02) higher in inoculated birds than in controls between 6 and 10 days postinoculation (PI). The histologic splenic lesions, which consisted of reticuloendothelial cell hyperplasia, intranuclear inclusions within reticuloendothelial cells, and lymphoid depletion, were most prominent between 6 and 10 days PI. In a second experiment, 1-day-old pheasants were chemically bursectomized by dosing birds with 1.2 mg cyclophosphamide on 3 consecutive days. At 7 weeks of age, 54 bursectomized birds were inoculated orally with 5.0 x 10(2) TCID of marble spleen disease virus. Gross and histologic lesions were detected in one of the inoculated pheasants, but the mean splenic weight was not significantly different from control birds at any time PI. These results are evidence of the role of the bursa of Fabricius in the pathogenesis of marble spleen disease. |
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