A csirkék mirigyesgyomor-elhalását okozó birnavírusa (Chicken Proventricular Necrosis Virus) okozta fertőzés első megállapítása pettyes fogasfürjben (Cyrtonyx montezumae)
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Date
2024-09Author
Dobra, Péter Ferenc
Molnár, László
Hoitsy, Márton
Ziszisz, Árisz
Mándoki, Míra
Sós, Endre
Sós-Koroknai, Viktória
Schönhardt, Kitti
Gál, János
DOI link
10.56385/magyallorv.2024.09.529-536Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: The chicken proventricular necrosis virus (CPNV) is a recently identi-
fied birnavirus proposed to be the cause of transmissible viral proventriculitis (TVP),
an emerging disease primarily affecting broiler flocks. To the authors' knowledge,
this is the first confirmed CPNV infection in Montezuma quail.
Objectives: This study aims to highlight the potential role of other gallinaceous
birds in spreading CPNV by presenting the post-mortem examination findings
of a Montezuma quail.
Materials and Methods: A 1.5-year-old Montezuma quail carcass underwent
necropsy for diagnostic purposes. Tissue samples from the affected organs were
fixed in formalin, embedded in paraffin wax, and stained for light microscopic
examination. Routine bacteriological examination was conducted on the liver.
RNA was extracted from the proventriculus and tested for CPNV using reverse
transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction (RT–PCR). Additional (RT–)PCR tests were
performed for other possible gastrointestinal viruses. The amplified product from
the CPNV-positive RT–PCR case was purified for sequencing.
Results and Discussion: Necropsy revealed greyish-white, ointment-like content
on the proventricular mucosa; dilation of the cranial blind sac of the ventriculus, and a diffusely degenerated koilin layer in the ventriculus. Light microscopy
showed scattered focal lymphoid aggregates in the proventricular glands; heterophilic infiltration, and Gram-positive bacteria in the mucosal glands of the
ventriculus, along with mixed inflammatory cellular infiltration in the interstitium.
No pathogenic bacteria were found in the liver with routine bacteriological examination. Of the nine viruses examined, only the RT–PCR test for CPNV nucleic acid
was positive. Sequencing confirmed the virus strain matched those previously
identified in domestic hens and pheasants in Hungary.