APA
Perisé Barrios, Ana Judith & Tomeo Martín, Beatriz Davinia & Gómez Ochoa, Pablo & Delgado Bonet, Pablo & Plaza, Pedro & Palau Concejo, Paula & González, Jorge & Ortiz Díez, Gustavo & Meléndez Lazo, Antonio & Gentil, Michaela & García Castro, Javier & Barbero Fernández, Alicia de los Ángeles .Humoral responses to SARS¿CoV¿2 by healthy and sick dogs during the COVID¿19 pandemic in Spain.
ISO 690
Perisé Barrios, Ana Judith & Tomeo Martín, Beatriz Davinia & Gómez Ochoa, Pablo & Delgado Bonet, Pablo & Plaza, Pedro & Palau Concejo, Paula & González, Jorge & Ortiz Díez, Gustavo & Meléndez Lazo, Antonio & Gentil, Michaela & García Castro, Javier & Barbero Fernández, Alicia de los Ángeles. Humoral responses to SARS¿CoV¿2 by healthy and sick dogs during the COVID¿19 pandemic in Spain.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/24023
Resumen:
COVID-19 is a zoonotic disease caused by SARS-CoV-2. Infections of animals with SARS-CoV-2 have recently been
reported, and an increase of severe lung pathologies in domestic dogs has also been detected by veterinarians in
Spain. Therefore, further descriptions of the pathological processes in those animals that show symptoms similar to
those described in humans afected by COVID-19 would be highly valuable. The potential for companion animals
to contribute to the continued transmission and community spread of this known human-to-human disease is an
urgent issue to be considered. Forty animals with pulmonary pathologies were studied by chest X-ray, ultrasound
analysis, and computed tomography. Nasopharyngeal and rectal swabs were analyzed to detect canine pathogens,
including SARS-CoV-2. An additional twenty healthy dogs living in SARS-CoV-2-positive households were included.
Immunoglobulin detection by several immunoassays was performed. Our fndings show that sick dogs presented
severe alveolar or interstitial patterns with pulmonary opacity, parenchymal abnormalities, and bilateral lesions. The
forty sick dogs were negative for SARS-CoV-2 but Mycoplasma spp. was detected in 26 of 33 dogs. Five healthy and
one pathological dog presented IgG against SARS-CoV-2. Here we report that despite detecting dogs with ¿-SARSCoV-2 IgG, we never obtained a positive RT-qPCR for SARS-SoV-2, not even in dogs with severe pulmonary disease;
suggesting that even in the case of canine infection, transmission would be unlikely. Moreover, dogs living in COVID19-positive households could have been more highly exposed to infection with SARS-CoV-2.