Age-dependent pathogenicity of group B coxsackieviruses in Swiss-Webster mice: infectivity for myocardium and pancreas

J Infect Dis. 1980 Mar;141(3):394-403. doi: 10.1093/infdis/141.3.394.

Abstract

Coxsackieviruses B1-B4 were inoculated intraperitoneally into 48-hr-old, 14-day-old, and three- to five-month-old Swiss-Webster mice. Immediate death occurred only among mice less than 48 hr old, which died from fulminant encephalitis. Older mice usually survived. Myocarditis ensued in mice less than 48 hr old that were infected with coxsackieviruses B1 and B4. Several of the surviving mice developed left ventricular aneurysms, which resulted from transmural necrotizing myocarditis. In this group (coxsackieviruses B1 and B4), pathologic changes in the heart were synchronous with maximal cardiac titers of virus. Fourteen-day-old mice infected with coxsackieviruses B2 and B3 developed nontransmural necrotizing myocarditis in which maximal pathologic changes followed peak cardiac titers of virus by several days, whereas three- to five-month-old mice infected with coxsackieviruses B1, B2, B3, or B4 showed maximal susceptibility to destructive lesions in the exocrine glandular pancreas. Therefore, specific susceptibilities to infection with coxsackieviruses group B vary with age of the mouse, virus type (and strain), and organ.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Aging
  • Animals
  • Coxsackievirus Infections / pathology*
  • Disease Models, Animal
  • Enterovirus / classification
  • Enterovirus / pathogenicity*
  • Female
  • Heart / microbiology*
  • Male
  • Meningoencephalitis / mortality
  • Meningoencephalitis / pathology
  • Mice
  • Myocarditis / etiology
  • Myocarditis / pathology
  • Myocardium / pathology
  • Pancreas / microbiology*
  • Pancreas / pathology