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Prevalence of inclusion body disease and associated comorbidity in captive collections of boid and pythonid snakes in Belgium

(2020) PLOS ONE. 15(3).
Author
Organization
Abstract
Inclusion body disease (IBD) is caused by reptarenaviruses and constitutes one of the most notorious viral diseases in snakes. Although central nervous system disease and various other clinical signs have been attributed to IBD in boid and pythonid snakes, studies that unambiguously reveal the clinical course of natural IBD and reptarenavirus infection are scarce. In the present study, the prevalence of IBD and reptarenaviruses in captive snake collections and the correlation of IBD and reptarenavirus infection with the clinical status of the sampled snakes were investigated. In three IBD positive collections, long-term follow-up during a three- to seven-year period was performed. A total of 292 snakes (178 boas and 114 pythons) from 40 collections in Belgium were sampled. In each snake, blood and buffy coat smears were evaluated for the presence of IBD inclusion bodies (IB) and whole blood was tested for reptarenavirus RNA by RT-PCR. Of all tested snakes, 16.5% (48/292) were positive for IBD of which all were boa constrictors (34.0%; 48/141) and 17.1% (50/292) were reptarenavirus RT-PCR positive. The presence of IB could not be demonstrated in any of the tested pythons, while 5.3% (6/114) were reptarenavirus positive. In contrast to pythons, the presence of IB in peripheral blood cells in boa constrictors is strongly correlated with reptarenavirus detection by RT-PCR (P<0.0001). Although boa constrictors often show persistent subclinical infection, long-term follow-up indicated that a considerable number (22.2%; 6/27) of IBD/reptarenavirus positive boas eventually develop IBD associated comorbidities.
Keywords
BOA-CONSTRICTOR-CONSTRICTOR, LYMPHOBLASTIC LYMPHOMA, ARENAVIRUSES, IDENTIFICATION, RETROVIRUSES

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Citation

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MLA
Simard, Jules, et al. “Prevalence of Inclusion Body Disease and Associated Comorbidity in Captive Collections of Boid and Pythonid Snakes in Belgium.” PLOS ONE, vol. 15, no. 3, 2020, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0229667.
APA
Simard, J., Marschang, R. E., Leineweber, C., & Hellebuyck, T. (2020). Prevalence of inclusion body disease and associated comorbidity in captive collections of boid and pythonid snakes in Belgium. PLOS ONE, 15(3). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229667
Chicago author-date
Simard, Jules, Rachel E Marschang, Christoph Leineweber, and Tom Hellebuyck. 2020. “Prevalence of Inclusion Body Disease and Associated Comorbidity in Captive Collections of Boid and Pythonid Snakes in Belgium.” PLOS ONE 15 (3). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229667.
Chicago author-date (all authors)
Simard, Jules, Rachel E Marschang, Christoph Leineweber, and Tom Hellebuyck. 2020. “Prevalence of Inclusion Body Disease and Associated Comorbidity in Captive Collections of Boid and Pythonid Snakes in Belgium.” PLOS ONE 15 (3). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0229667.
Vancouver
1.
Simard J, Marschang RE, Leineweber C, Hellebuyck T. Prevalence of inclusion body disease and associated comorbidity in captive collections of boid and pythonid snakes in Belgium. PLOS ONE. 2020;15(3).
IEEE
[1]
J. Simard, R. E. Marschang, C. Leineweber, and T. Hellebuyck, “Prevalence of inclusion body disease and associated comorbidity in captive collections of boid and pythonid snakes in Belgium,” PLOS ONE, vol. 15, no. 3, 2020.
@article{8651570,
  abstract     = {{Inclusion body disease (IBD) is caused by reptarenaviruses and constitutes one of the most notorious viral diseases in snakes. Although central nervous system disease and various other clinical signs have been attributed to IBD in boid and pythonid snakes, studies that unambiguously reveal the clinical course of natural IBD and reptarenavirus infection are scarce. In the present study, the prevalence of IBD and reptarenaviruses in captive snake collections and the correlation of IBD and reptarenavirus infection with the clinical status of the sampled snakes were investigated. In three IBD positive collections, long-term follow-up during a three- to seven-year period was performed. A total of 292 snakes (178 boas and 114 pythons) from 40 collections in Belgium were sampled. In each snake, blood and buffy coat smears were evaluated for the presence of IBD inclusion bodies (IB) and whole blood was tested for reptarenavirus RNA by RT-PCR. Of all tested snakes, 16.5% (48/292) were positive for IBD of which all were boa constrictors (34.0%; 48/141) and 17.1% (50/292) were reptarenavirus RT-PCR positive. The presence of IB could not be demonstrated in any of the tested pythons, while 5.3% (6/114) were reptarenavirus positive. In contrast to pythons, the presence of IB in peripheral blood cells in boa constrictors is strongly correlated with reptarenavirus detection by RT-PCR (P<0.0001). Although boa constrictors often show persistent subclinical infection, long-term follow-up indicated that a considerable number (22.2%; 6/27) of IBD/reptarenavirus positive boas eventually develop IBD associated comorbidities.}},
  articleno    = {{e0229667}},
  author       = {{Simard, Jules and Marschang, Rachel E and Leineweber, Christoph and Hellebuyck, Tom}},
  issn         = {{1932-6203}},
  journal      = {{PLOS ONE}},
  keywords     = {{BOA-CONSTRICTOR-CONSTRICTOR,LYMPHOBLASTIC LYMPHOMA,ARENAVIRUSES,IDENTIFICATION,RETROVIRUSES}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{13}},
  title        = {{Prevalence of inclusion body disease and associated comorbidity in captive collections of boid and pythonid snakes in Belgium}},
  url          = {{http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229667}},
  volume       = {{15}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}

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