• Medicina · Jan 1990

    Hantavirus infection in laboratory and wild rodents in Argentina.

    • M C Weissenbacher, M S Merani, V L Hodara, G de Villafañe, D C Gajdusek, Y K Chu, and H W Lee.
    • Departamento de Microbiología, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina.
    • Medicina (B Aires). 1990 Jan 1; 50 (1): 434643-6.

    AbstractSerum samples from urban and laboratory rats, laboratory mice and wild and laboratory cricetids in Argentina were tested by immunofluorescence and plaque reduction neutralization tests to investigate prevalence of anti-Hantavirus antibodies. A total of 102 sera were obtained from laboratory rodents in 4 different animal-rooms, 31 from harbor rats and 30 from wild cricetids in 1985-1987. Anti-Hantavirus antibodies were detected in 22.5% of Rattus norvegicus in 3 of the animal-rooms but harbor rats were found to be free of Hantavirus infection. Previously, the presence of anti-Hantavirus antibodies had been demonstrated in the sera obtained from laboratory workers in these same 3 animal-rooms; it can be concluded that the laboratory rats were the source of this human infection. On the contrary, laboratory mice and cricetids failed to show Hantavirus infection while the wild vesper mouse Calomys musculinus (the main Junin virus reservoir) showed a prevalence of 23.5%. The presence of Hantavirus infection is hereby reported for the first time in wild C. musculinus and in laboratory R. norvegicus in Argentina.

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