Parrish Stephanie W K, Brown Arthur E, Chanbancherd Penprapa, Gettayacamin Montip, Parrish John H
U.S. Military HIV Research Program, Henry M. Jackson Foundation, Rockville, Maryland, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2004 Jun;63(2):103-9. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20043.
A 3.3% seroprevalence of simian T-lymphotropic virus (STLV) was found in a closed breeding and research colony of rhesus and cynomolgus macaques in Thailand. Epidemiology of STLV within the colony was assessed by means of a retrospective analysis of banked and freshly collected serum samples, and a review of the animals' medical records. Evidence was found that the virus had been imported into the colony by some of the original animals, and was subsequently transmitted both vertically and horizontally. The cell-associated nature of STLV was demonstrated by iatrogenic transmission of the virus following a whole blood transfusion, but there was no transmission to animals that received only serum from the same infected donor. Transmission by all routes was infrequent, as indicated by the overall seroprevalence of 3.3% (14 of 420 samples) after the colony had been closed for 11 years. Maternal-infant transmission appeared to be < 12%.
在泰国一个封闭的恒河猴和食蟹猴繁殖与研究群体中,发现猿猴T淋巴细胞白血病病毒(STLV)血清阳性率为3.3%。通过对储存和新采集的血清样本进行回顾性分析以及查阅动物病历,评估了该群体内STLV的流行病学情况。有证据表明,该病毒是由一些原种动物引入群体的,随后通过垂直和水平方式传播。全血输血后病毒的医源性传播证明了STLV与细胞相关的特性,但接受来自同一感染供体血清的动物未被感染。在该群体封闭11年后,总体血清阳性率为3.3%(420份样本中有14份),表明所有传播途径的传播都不常见。母婴传播率似乎低于12%。