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  • Title: Histopathologic and ultrastructural studies of disseminated cytomegalovirus infection in strain 2 guinea pigs.
    Author: Fong CK, Lucia H, Bia FJ, Hsiung GD.
    Journal: Lab Invest; 1983 Aug; 49(2):183-94. PubMed ID: 6308346.
    Abstract:
    Inbred strain 2 guinea pigs developed severe disseminated disease during acute experimental guinea pig cytomegalovirus (GPCMV) infection. A high mortality rate (100%) resulted, with most animals dying between 10 and 14 days after high dose (7.5 X 10(5) TCID50) virus inoculation. Infectious virus was recovered from many tissues, including spleen, lungs, liver, pancreas, heart, adrenals, kidneys, and salivary glands. The rate of GPCMV isolation from these tissues ranged from 50 to 100%. Gross lesions were observed in the spleen, liver, and lungs. On histologic examination, lesions were also seen in many other organs, including heart, pancreas, kidneys, adrenals, brain, intestines, and salivary glands. Intranuclear viral inclusions were present in many cell types of various organs. Under electron microscopic examination, cells with viral inclusions were easily found in the spleen, and liver, but less readily in the lungs, kidneys, salivary glands, and other organs. Most of the intranuclear inclusions consisted of electron-dense fibrils (10 nm diameter), viral nucleocapsids (100 nm), and tubular structures (60 nm diameter). Dense bodies and enveloped dense virions containing single or multiple capsids were present in the cytoplasm of many infected cells. The morphologic developments of GPCMV in these visceral tissues of strain 2 guinea pigs resembled those seen in GPCMV-infected cultured guinea pig cells but differed from those observed in the infected salivary gland duct cells. Strain 2 guinea pigs are a useful animal model for studying disseminated infection in CMV-associated human diseases.
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