Gould Ar
Australian Animal Health Laboratory
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Publication
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Australian Veterinary Journal | 1999
Hooper Pt; Ross A. Lunt; Gould Ar; A. D. Hyatt; Russell Gm; Kattenbelt Ja; Stuart D. Blacksell; Reddacliff La; Kirkland Pd; Davis Rj; Durham Pj; Bishop Al; Waddington J
Objective To determine the cause of an epidemic of blindness in kangaroos. Design and procedures Laboratory examinations were made of eyes and brains of a large number of kangaroos using serological, virological, histopathological, electron microscopical, immunohistochemical methods, and PCR with cDNA sequencing. In addition, potential insect viral vectors identified during the disease outbreak were examined for specific viral genomic sequences. Sample population For histopathological analysis, 55 apparently blind and 18 apparently normal wild kangaroos and wallabies were obtained from New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, and Western Australia. A total of 437 wild kangaroos and wallabies (including 23 animals with apparent blindness) were examined serologically. Results Orbiviruses of the Wallal and Warrego serogroups were isolated from kangaroos affected with blindness in a major epidemic in south-eastern Australia in 1994 and 1995 and extending to Western Australia in 1995/96. Histopathological examinations showed severe degeneration and inflammation in the eyes, and mild inflammation in the brains. In affected retinas, Wallal virus antigen was detected by immunohistochemical analysis and orbiviruses were seen in electron microscopy. There was serological variation in the newly isolated Wallal virus from archival Wallal virus that had been isolated in northern Australia. There were also variations of up to 20% in genotype sequence from the reference archival virus. Polymerase chain reactions showed that Wallal virus was present during the epidemic in three species of midges, Culicoides austropalpalis, C dycei and C marksi. Wallal virus nucleic acid was also detected by PCR in a paraffin-embedded retina taken from a blind kangaroo in 1975. Conclusion Wallal virus and perhaps also Warrego virus are the cause of the outbreak of blindness in kangaroos. Other viruses may also be involved, but the evidence in this paper indicates a variant of Wallal virus, an orbivirus transmitted by midges, has the strongest aetiological association, and immunohistochemical analysis implicates it as the most damaging factor in the affected eyes.
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1996
Hooper Pt; Gould Ar; Russell Gm; Kattenbelt Ja; Mitchell G
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1993
McColl Ka; Gould Ar; Paul Selleck; Hooper Pt; H.A. Westbury; Smith Js
Virus Research | 2004
L.I. Pritchard; I Sendow; Ross A. Lunt; S.H Hassan; Kattenbelt Ja; Gould Ar; Peter Daniels; Bryan T. Eaton
Australian Veterinary Journal | 2000
Hooper Pt; Gould Ar; A. D. Hyatt; Braun Ma; Kattenbelt Ja; Sandra G. Hengstberger; H.A. Westbury
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1989
Gould Ar; A. D. Hyatt; Bt Eaton; White; Hooper Pt; Sd Blacksell; Pm Le Blanc Smith
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1994
McColl Ka; Gould Ar
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1992
Bashiruddin Jb; Gould Ar; Westbury Ha
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1999
L Reddacliff; Peter D. Kirkland; Adrian Philbey; Rodney Davis; L Vogelnest; F Hulst; D Blyde; A Deykin; J Smith; Hooper Pt; Gould Ar; A. D. Hyatt
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1994
McColl Ka; Gould Ar; Li Pritchard; L Mel Ville; G. Bellis
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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