van den Brand Judith Ma, Krone Oliver, Wolf Peter U, van de Bildt Marco W G, van Amerongen Geert, Osterhaus Albert D M E, Kuiken Thijs
Department of Viroscience, Erasmus Medical Center, Dr. Molewaterplein 50, 3015 GE, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
Department Wildlife Diseases, Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Alfred-Kowalke-Straße 17, 10315, Berlin, Germany.
Vet Res. 2015 Mar 5;46:24. doi: 10.1186/s13567-015-0148-5.
Raptors may contract highly pathogenic avian influenza virus H5N1 by hunting or scavenging infected prey. However, natural H5N1 infection in raptors is rarely reported. Therefore, we tested raptors found dead during an H5N1 outbreak in wild waterbirds in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany, in 2006 for H5N1-associated disease. We tested 624 raptors of nine species-common buzzard (385), Eurasian sparrowhawk (111), common kestrel (38), undetermined species of buzzard (36), white-tailed sea eagle (19), undetermined species of raptor (12), northern goshawk (10), peregrine falcon (6), red kite (3), rough-legged buzzard (3), and western marsh-harrier (1)-for H5N1 infection in tracheal or combined tracheal/cloacal swabs of all birds, and on major tissues of all white-tailed sea eagles. H5N1 infection was detected in two species: common buzzard (12 positive, 3.1%) and peregrine falcon (2 positive, 33.3%). In all necropsied birds (both peregrine falcons and the six freshest common buzzards), H5N1 was found most consistently and at the highest concentration in the brain, and the main H5N1-associated lesion was marked non-suppurative encephalitis. Other H5N1-associated lesions occurred in air sac, lung, oviduct, heart, pancreas, coelomic ganglion, and adrenal gland. Our results show that the main cause of death in H5N1-positive raptors was encephalitis. Our results imply that H5N1 outbreaks in wild waterbirds are more likely to lead to exposure to and mortality from H5N1 in raptors that hunt or scavenge medium-sized birds, such as common buzzards and peregrine falcons, than in raptors that hunt small birds and do not scavenge, such as Eurasian sparrowhawks and common kestrels.
猛禽可能通过捕食或啄食受感染的猎物而感染高致病性禽流感病毒H5N1。然而,猛禽自然感染H5N1的情况鲜有报道。因此,我们对2006年在德国梅克伦堡-前波美拉尼亚野生水鸟H5N1疫情期间发现死亡的猛禽进行了H5N1相关疾病检测。我们检测了9种共624只猛禽,包括普通鵟(385只)、雀鹰(111只)、红隼(38只)、未确定种类的鵟(36只)、白尾海雕(19只)、未确定种类的猛禽(12只)、苍鹰(10只)、游隼(6只)、赤鸢(3只)、毛脚鵟(3只)和西方沼泽鹞(1只),检测所有鸟类气管拭子或气管/泄殖腔联合拭子以及所有白尾海雕的主要组织中是否存在H5N1感染。在两种猛禽中检测到H5N1感染:普通鵟(12只呈阳性,3.1%)和游隼(2只呈阳性,33.3%)。在所有剖检的鸟类(游隼和6只最新鲜的普通鵟)中,H5N1在脑中最常被发现且浓度最高,与H5N1相关的主要病变为明显的非化脓性脑炎。其他与H5N1相关的病变出现在气囊、肺、输卵管、心脏、胰腺、体腔神经节和肾上腺。我们的结果表明H5N1阳性猛禽的主要死因是脑炎。我们的结果意味着野生水鸟中的H5N1疫情更有可能导致捕食或啄食中等体型鸟类(如普通鵟和游隼)的猛禽接触H5N1并死亡,而不是捕食小型鸟类且不啄食的猛禽(如雀鹰和红隼)。