Clinical presentation and serological responses to natural outbreaks of rabies in a captive colony of common vampire bats

Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
By: , and 

Links

Abstract

We report mortality events in a group of 123 common vampire bats (Desmodus rotundus) captured in México and housed for a rabies vaccine efficacy study in Madison, Wisconsin. Bat mortalities occurred in México and Wisconsin, but rabies cases reported herein are only those that occurred after arrival in Madison (n = 15). Bats were confirmed positive for rabies virus (RABV) by the direct fluorescent antibody test. In accordance with previous reports, we observed long incubation periods (more than 100 days), variability in clinical signs prior to death, excretion of virus in saliva, and changes in rabies neutralizing antibody (rVNA) titers post-infection. We observed that the furious form of rabies (aggression, hyper-salivation, and hyper-excitability) manifested in three bats, which has not been reported in vampire bat studies since 1936. RABV was detected in saliva of 5/9 bats, 2–5 days prior to death, but was not detected in four of those bats that had been vaccinated shortly after exposure. Bats from different capture sites were involved in two separate outbreaks, and phylogenetic analysis revealed differences in the glycoprotein gene sequences of RABV isolated from each event, indicating that two different lineages were circulating separately during capture at each site.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Clinical presentation and serological responses to natural outbreaks of rabies in a captive colony of common vampire bats
Series title Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
DOI 10.3390/tropicalmed5010034
Volume 5
Issue 1
Year Published 2020
Language English
Publisher MDPI
Contributing office(s) National Wildlife Health Center
Description 34, 13 p.
Country Mexico
Google Analytic Metrics Metrics page
Additional publication details