Pesavento P A, Murphy B G
School of Veterinary Medicine, UC Davis, Vet Med: PMI, 4206 VM3A, 1 Shields Ave, Davis, CA 95616, USA. Email:
Vet Pathol. 2014 Mar;51(2):478-91. doi: 10.1177/0300985813511129. Epub 2013 Nov 21.
The beneficial role that animal shelters play is unquestionable. An estimated 3 to 4 million animals are cared for or placed in homes each year, and most shelters promote public health and support responsible pet ownership. It is, nonetheless, inevitable that shelters are prime examples of anthropogenic biological instability: even well-run shelters often house transient, displaced, and mixed populations of animals. Many of these animals have received minimal to no prior health care, and some have a history of scavenging or predation to survive. Overcrowding and poor shelter conditions further magnify these inherent risks to create individual, intraspecies, and interspecies stress and provide an environment conducive to exposure to numerous potentially collaborative pathogens. All of these factors can contribute to the evolution and emergence of new pathogens or to alterations in virulence of endemic pathogens. While it is not possible to effectively anticipate the timing or the pathogen type in emergence events, their sites of origin are less enigmatic, and pathologists and diagnosticians who work with sheltered animal populations have recognized several such events in the past decade. This article first considers the contribution of the shelter environment to canine and feline disease. This is followed by summaries of recent research on the pathogenesis of common shelter pathogens, as well as research that has led to the discovery of novel or emerging diseases and the methods that are used for their diagnosis and discovery. For the infectious agents that commonly affect sheltered dogs and cats, including canine distemper virus, canine influenza virus, Streptococcus spp, parvoviruses, feline herpesvirus, feline caliciviruses, and feline infectious peritonitis virus, we present familiar as well as newly recognized lesions associated with infection. Preliminary studies on recently discovered viruses like canine circovirus, canine bocavirus, and feline norovirus indicate that these pathogens can cause or contribute to canine and feline disease.
动物收容所发挥的有益作用是毋庸置疑的。据估计,每年有300万至400万只动物得到照料或被安置到家庭中,而且大多数收容所都促进了公共卫生并支持负责任的宠物饲养。然而,收容所不可避免地成为人为导致生物不稳定的典型例子:即使管理良好的收容所也常常收留临时的、流离失所的以及混杂的动物群体。这些动物中许多之前很少或根本没有接受过医疗护理,有些还有靠 scavenging(此处可能有误,推测应为scavenging,意为觅食或捡食)或捕食为生的历史。过度拥挤和恶劣的收容所条件进一步加剧了这些内在风险,从而造成个体、种内和种间压力,并提供了一个有利于接触众多潜在协同病原体的环境。所有这些因素都可能导致新病原体的进化和出现,或导致地方性病原体毒力的改变。虽然不可能有效地预测新出现事件的时间或病原体类型,但它们的起源地就不那么神秘了,过去十年里,从事收容动物群体工作的病理学家和诊断医生已经识别出了几起这样的事件。本文首先考虑收容所环境对犬猫疾病的影响。接下来是对常见收容所病原体发病机制的近期研究总结,以及导致发现新的或正在出现的疾病的研究,还有用于诊断和发现这些疾病的方法。对于通常感染收容所犬猫的病原体,包括犬瘟热病毒、犬流感病毒、链球菌属、细小病毒、猫疱疹病毒、猫杯状病毒和猫传染性腹膜炎病毒,我们展示了与感染相关的常见以及新发现的病变。对最近发现的病毒如犬圆环病毒、犬博卡病毒和猫诺如病毒的初步研究表明,这些病原体可导致犬猫疾病或在其中起作用。