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Infectious
Salmon Anemia Virus: Injection Challenge
And Waterborne Transmission Monitored By Hematology And Polymerase Chain
Reaction AssayPhilip E. McAllister1, Christine L. Densmore1,
and Patricia A. Barbash2 1U.S. Geological
Survey, Leetown Science Center, National Fish Health Research Laboratory, 11700
Leetown Road, Kearneysville, WV 25430;
2U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Northeast Fisheries Center, Fish Health
Section, P.O. Box 155, Lamar, PA 16848 In
July 2002, 4-year-old domestic Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) broodstock were segregated by gender and as control and
infectious salmon anemia virus (ISAv) challenge cohorts. All fish initially tested as unexposed to
ISAv by polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay. In September 2002, ISAv cohorts received a primary
intraperitoneal injection (104 TCID50) followed at 2
weeks by intravenous and intramuscular injections (104 TCID50). Control cohorts received the same sequence
of injections but with phosphate buffered saline. At 2-4 week sampling intervals blood was collected via caudal
venipuncture for RT-PCR testing and assessment of hematological parameters by
complete blood count. At 2 weeks after
primary injection, 100% of the ISAv-exposed fish (21/21) tested as ISAv-PCR
positive, and the control fish continued to test ISAv-PCR negative. Mortality in the ISAv-exposed cohorts began
3 weeks post primary injection and continued with acute mortality for 3 weeks
(52%; 11/21) and with chronic mortality for an additional 2 months (24%;
5/21). Beginning at 4 weeks post
injection, some ISAv-exposed fish showed sporadic conversion between ISAv-PCR
positive and ISAv-PCR negative. By 4
months post primary injection, all remaining ISAv-exposed fish (5/5) tested as
ISAv-PCR negative. In January 2003, the
remaining control and ISAv-exposed cohorts were cohabitated for assessment of
potential horizontal transmission.
Within 4 weeks of combining the cohorts, 93% of the control fish (13/14)
tested as ISAv-PCR positive, and within 5 weeks, 86% (12/14) of the control
fish died. The surviving original ISAv-exposed
fish (5/5) continued to test as ISAv-PCR negative, and by 8 weeks the surviving
control fish (2/2) also tested as ISAv-PCR negative. Substantial decreases in
hematocrit, erythrocyte count, and total leucocyte counts were observed among
the ISAv-exposed fish at 2 weeks after the initial ISAv challenge. These parameters rebounded at the subsequent
2-week sampling interval, but alterations in lymphocyte morphology were
evident. Similar hematological changes
were noted among the control cohorts following cohabitation with the
ISAv-exposed fish.
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