Pregnant female mice, after intravaginal inoculation with Herpesvirus hominis (HVH) type 2, developed vaginitis on days 5 to 7 after virus challenge, followed by hunching and hind limb paralysis on days 7 to 9 and death from encephalitis on days 9 to 11. After initial replication in the mucous membranes of the genital tract, virus spread to the spinal cord and ascended to involve the brain. Viremia or replication of H. hominis type 2 in the liver or spleen was not detected. Virus was cleared from vaginal secretions by days 8 to 10 after infection. Pregnant mice were more susceptible to the infection than nonpregnant mice. This experimental infection in female mice provides a model for genital herpesvirus infection and for herpesvirus encephalitis in which one can evaluate potentially promising antiviral chemotherapeutic agents.
CITATION STYLE
Overall, J. C., Kern, E. R., Schlitzer, R. L., Friedman, S. B., & Glasgow, L. A. (1975). Genital Herpesvirus hominis infection in mice. I. Development of an experimental model. Infection and Immunity, 11(3), 476–480. https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.11.3.476-480.1975
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