National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Centre for Infectious Disease Control, Bilthoven, The Netherlands; Department of Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado; Bentley University, Waltham, Massachusetts.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2014 Feb;90(2):242-6. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.13-0161. Epub 2014 Jan 6.
Ardeid birds and pigs are known as major amplifying hosts for Japanese encephalitis virus, and ducklings and chickens have been considered to play at best a minor role in outbreaks because of their low or absent viremia. We hypothesized that viremia of sufficient magnitude would develop in young ducklings (Anas platyrhynchos) and chicks (Gallus gallus) for them to serve as reservoir hosts and thereby contribute to the transmission cycle. Infection was associated with reduced weight gain in both species, and ducklings infected at 10 days of age or less showed overt clinical signs of disease. The mean peak viremia in birds of both species decreased as the age at infection increased from 2 to 42 days, indicating the importance of age of infection on magnitude of viremia in birds from both species, and suggesting that young poultry may be amplifying hosts of importance in disease-endemic regions.
苍鹭和猪是日本脑炎病毒的主要扩增宿主,而小鸭和小鸡由于其低或不存在病毒血症,被认为在疫情中作用不大。我们假设在小鸭(Anas platyrhynchos)和小鸡(Gallus gallus)中会出现足够大的病毒血症,使它们成为储存宿主,并从而有助于传播周期。感染与两种物种的体重减轻有关,感染后 10 天或更年轻的小鸭表现出明显的疾病临床症状。随着感染年龄从 2 天增加到 42 天,两种鸟类的平均峰值病毒血症均降低,这表明感染年龄对两种鸟类病毒血症的严重程度具有重要意义,并且表明年幼家禽可能是疾病流行地区的重要扩增宿主。