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Emerg Infect Dis . Encephalitis and Death in Wild Mammals at a Rehabilitation Center after Infection with Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza A(H5N8) Virus, United Kingdom

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  • Emerg Infect Dis . Encephalitis and Death in Wild Mammals at a Rehabilitation Center after Infection with Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza A(H5N8) Virus, United Kingdom


    Emerg Infect Dis


    . 2021 Nov;27(11):2856-2863.
    doi: 10.3201/eid2711.211225.
    Encephalitis and Death in Wild Mammals at a Rehabilitation Center after Infection with Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza A(H5N8) Virus, United Kingdom

    Tobias Floyd, Ashley C Banyard, Fabian Z X Lean, Alexander M P Byrne, Edward Fullick, Elliot Whittard, Benjamin C Mollett, Steve Bexton, Vanessa Swinson, Michele Macrelli, Nicola S Lewis, Scott M Reid, Alejandro Núñez, J Paul Duff, Rowena Hansen, Ian H BrownFree article

    Abstract

    We report a disease and mortality event involving swans, seals, and a fox at a wildlife rehabilitation center in the United Kingdom during late 2020. Five swans had onset of highly pathogenic avian influenza virus infection while in captivity. Subsequently, 5 seals and a fox died (or were euthanized) after onset of clinical disease. Avian-origin influenza A virus subtype H5N8 was retrospectively determined as the cause of disease. Infection in the seals manifested as seizures, and immunohistochemical and molecular testing on postmortem samples detected a neurologic distribution of viral products. The fox died overnight after sudden onset of inappetence, and postmortem tissues revealed neurologic and respiratory distribution of viral products. Live virus was isolated from the swans, seals, and the fox, and a single genetic change was detected as a potential adaptive mutation in the mammalian-derived viral sequences. No human influenza-like illness was reported in the weeks after the event.

    Keywords: H5N8; United Kingdom; avian influenza; cetaceans; first detection; highly pathogenic; respiratory infections; systemic infection; terrestrial carnivores; viruses; zoonoses.

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