Publication | Closed Access
An epizootic of blindness and encephalitis associated with a herpesvirus indistinguishable from equine herpesvirus I in a herd of alpacas and llamas
68
Citations
0
References
1988
Year
Funduscopic EvidenceAnimal ScienceZoonotic DiseasePathogenesisVeterinary PathologyVeterinary SciencePathologyVirologyEducationVeterinary EpidemiologyAffected AnimalsVeterinary DiagnosticsEquine HerpesvirusMedicineAnimal VirusEpidemiology
Blindness characterized by dilated unresponsive pupils and funduscopic evidence of varying degrees of vitritis, retinal vasculitis, retinitis, chorioretinitis, and optic neuritis developed in 21 alpacas and 1 llama within a 30-day period. The animals were part of a group of approximately 100 animals imported from Chile one year earlier. The animals had spent 6 months in quarantine and then, for the 6 months preceding the epizootic, were housed at an exotic animal import-export farm, where the disease developed. Four of the affected animals also had signs of neurologic dysfunction. A herpesvirus indistinguishable from equine herpesvirus I was isolated from 4 of the affected animals, and antibody titers diagnostic for equine herpesvirus I were demonstrated in the serum of all but one of the affected animals.