While dogs may indeed be man's
best friend, it turns out that they also have the ability to harbor one of
man's most common enemies - norovirus.
A study out of Finland has shown that pet dogs can carry human strains
of norovirus and pass them on to people in the household.
Researchers at the University of Helinski's Department of Food Hygiene
and Environmental Health took 92 fecal samples from dogs living in households
where either the dog or family members had recently experienced vomiting or
diarrhea - the most common symptoms of norovirus infection. They found human
strains of norovirus (HuNov) in 4 of these samples.
Norovirus is the leading cause of gastroenteritis, or what is commonly
thought of as stomach flu symptoms, in the United States. It affects 23 million
individuals in the country each year. While most cases resolve within a few
days, some can be severe and in rare cases fatal.
Until recently, it was thought that animals did not carry human
noroviruses, since "generally species barriers seem to be rather stong for
viruses," explains Carl-Henrick von Bonsdorff, co-author of the study and
member of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine.
However, "with the great number and variability of human norovirus
strains the idea of animal reservoirs has become more interesting," von
Bonsdorff told Food Safety News in an e-mailed statement.
The results of this study - published this month in the Journal of
Clinical Virology - show that it is indeed possible for animals to carry human
strains of norovirus. In fact, 2 of the dogs whose stool tested positive for
human norovirus had even displayed symptoms of infection themselves.
When asked whether this means that dogs might not only carry human
noroviruses but actually be sickened by them as well, von Bonsdorff noted that
this study cannot answer that question.
"Infection transmission will require more rigorous studies. The
study just shows that it is possible," he said.
So where do these dogs come into contact with the virus? Von Bonsdorff
says the most likely source is family members who have the disease,
specifically small children. Norovirus is most highly concentrated in feces, he
explains, but can also be transmitted through saliva and vomit.
This does not mean that dogs can't also pick up HuNoVs outside the home
by sniffing, licking or eating contaminated materials, notes von
Bonsdorff.
But before you lock up Fido and stop the children from playing with
him, keep in mind that the most common path for norovirus transmission is still
human to human.
"Viruses are in general rather species specific. It seems very
unlikely that the transmission would be as easy between man and dog," says
von Bonsdorff.
The next step for studying HuNoVs in animals is to look at whether the
virus can multiply within a dog's intestines, or whether it simply passes
through the animal.
For now, scientists have proof that dogs are capable of carrying the
disease, and can pass it on to their owners.
While von Bonsdorff says it is possible that other animals, such as
rodents, may also carry HuNoVs, as of yet there is no hard evidence that this
occurs.
GRETCHEN GOETZ
Food Safety News
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