Filovirus clearance in non-human primates

There has been concern in the USA and Europe about filovirus outbreaks in recently imported monkeys, and possible transmission to human beings. Healthy monkeys have been found to have low-titre immunofluorescence antibody (IFA) to Asian filoviruses (Reston and Pennsylvania viruses) as well as to the...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet (British edition) 1992-08, Vol.340 (8817), p.451-453
Hauptverfasser: Fisher-Hoch, S.P, Perez-Oronoz, G.I, Jackson, E.L, Hermann, L.M, Brown, B.G
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container_end_page 453
container_issue 8817
container_start_page 451
container_title The Lancet (British edition)
container_volume 340
creator Fisher-Hoch, S.P
Perez-Oronoz, G.I
Jackson, E.L
Hermann, L.M
Brown, B.G
description There has been concern in the USA and Europe about filovirus outbreaks in recently imported monkeys, and possible transmission to human beings. Healthy monkeys have been found to have low-titre immunofluorescence antibody (IFA) to Asian filoviruses (Reston and Pennsylvania viruses) as well as to the African filoviruses that caused fulminating human outbreaks in the 1970s (Ebola [Zaire] and Sudan viruses). We have assessed whether such monkeys are a risk to man. We studied 42 non-human primates; 31 were experimentally infected with African and Asian filoviruses, 6 were infected during a documented Reston filovirus outbreak, and 5 had serological evidence suggestive of recent filovirus infection. During the first 15 days after infection, virus could be routinely recovered from serum or biopsy or necropsy tissue, and Asian filovirus RNA could be detected by polymerase chain reaction. 20 to 600 days after challenge, filovirus could no longer be recovered nor viral RNA detected in 141 serum, liver, spleen, or kidney specimens. Animals surviving filovirus infection develop high-titre, cross-reacting filovirus-specific antibody 14 to 21 days after infection, and this coincides with virus clearance. Healthy monkeys with low-titre filovirus antibody may be regarded as uninfected.
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Healthy monkeys have been found to have low-titre immunofluorescence antibody (IFA) to Asian filoviruses (Reston and Pennsylvania viruses) as well as to the African filoviruses that caused fulminating human outbreaks in the 1970s (Ebola [Zaire] and Sudan viruses). We have assessed whether such monkeys are a risk to man. We studied 42 non-human primates; 31 were experimentally infected with African and Asian filoviruses, 6 were infected during a documented Reston filovirus outbreak, and 5 had serological evidence suggestive of recent filovirus infection. During the first 15 days after infection, virus could be routinely recovered from serum or biopsy or necropsy tissue, and Asian filovirus RNA could be detected by polymerase chain reaction. 20 to 600 days after challenge, filovirus could no longer be recovered nor viral RNA detected in 141 serum, liver, spleen, or kidney specimens. 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subjects Animals
Antibodies, Viral - blood
Antibody Formation
Biological and medical sciences
Biopsy
Blood - microbiology
Cercopithecus aethiops
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Filoviridae - classification
Fluorescent Antibody Technique
Humans
Immunity (Disease)
Infectious diseases
Kidney - microbiology
Liver - microbiology
Macaca fascicularis
Medical research
Medical sciences
Monkeys & apes
Outbreaks
Polymerase Chain Reaction
Spleen - microbiology
Viral diseases
Virus Diseases - immunology
Virus Diseases - microbiology
Virus Diseases - transmission
Viruses
title Filovirus clearance in non-human primates
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