Infection of a calf with the enteric coronavirus strain Paris

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Abstract

A tissue-culture-grown enteric coronavirus infected the whole of the gastrointestinal tract and caused enteritis and diarrhoea in a 10-day-old gnotobiotic Friesian calf. Diarrhoea occurred 2 days after inoculation and excretion of virus in faeces and rectal swabs increased until necropsy at 3 days. Virus growth, as detected by indirect immunofluorescence, virus isolation, and thin section electron microscopy, was most extensive in the epithelium of the colon and rectum at 3 days after inoculation. No virus was detected in other organs or in the pleural, peritoneal and oropharyngeal cavities. The origin and host specificity of this coronavirus is discussed. © 1982 Springer-Verlag.

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Patel, J. R., Davies, H. A., Edington, N., Laporte, J., & Macnaughton, M. R. (1982). Infection of a calf with the enteric coronavirus strain Paris. Archives of Virology, 73(3–4), 319–327. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01318085

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