Thanks to Fred for the usage of his excellent articles over the years which we have used to the benefit of the GSD Breed in Ireland during my time in the AIGSDA.
Until relatively
recently, canine herpes seemed to be a problem only in the whelping boxes
maintained by rank novices in breeding dogs. Experienced breeders could
control it, prevent the effects. But it appears that perhaps a different
strain of virus is running rampant and causing more and different problems
for breeders. From the website
www.canineherpes.com comes the comment
“Canine herpes virus … has been largely forgotten for many years, due in part
to the difficulty in making a definitive diagnosis. However, it is becoming
increasingly clear that the virus causes many more problems than was first
thought.” They were speaking mostly of the fading-puppy syndrome where
entire litters die off, one pup at a time, in the course of a day or two at
most.
Herpes is caused by
a virus. Demodectic mange is caused by the action of a parasitic mite on the
dog that has a weak immune system. Alike as night and day, you might think,
but there are one or two similarities: some dogs are more resistant to such
attacks than others, and the causative or triggering culprits are almost
everywhere. A close similarity in control and resistance is in the response
to other antigens, such as hookworm, coccidiosis, and even parvo. None of
these is an automatic death sentence if the dog is an adult or adolescent,
and is otherwise healthy. The very young and the very old are less able to
fight off new microbial or parasitic attacks. The more such stresses are put
on these individuals, the worse the prognosis. I have seen puppies die of
combinations like coccidiosis and hook, when they would have survived if only
one of those had been present. I have seen adults exposed to parvo for the
first time and come through the ordeal just fine. But combine the threats, or
aim them at the age extremes, and mortality rates become very high.
What I meant by the
omnipresence of antigens is that Demodex mites, for example can be found on
perhaps well over 90% of dogs and a big percentage of humans. (One researcher
said, “This disease can literally be carried home on your clothing.”) It’s
like dust or pollen… everywhere. But with an immune system not up to
par, and a combination of stress factors, and you have dangerous, even fatal
consequences. I once bought a bitch puppy for my mother. The pup developed
severe generalized demodecosis — so bad that all attempts at control failed,
and she had to be euthanized. Oestrus is by far the most stressful trigger
for demodicosis. Herpes virus, though an entirely different organism, also
exists on or in nearly all animals, including probably a transient and
harmless guest on humans. However, we therefore could transmit the virus to
our dogs. Virus particles do not live forever in non-nutrient (host)
environments, but long enough to be carried to the ultimate host on clothing,
by sneezes, etc. It is the immune-challenged weakened pup that would fall to
its onslaught. One difference between Demodex and Herpes is that the mite is
alive and active, though ineffective against a healthy dog; herpes virus
microbes enter a dormant state and are “awakened” by various stresses. Merial
says, “Most animals have already been exposed. Although it can be spread at
mating, it is much more likely to be spread by simple contact.”
According to an
Australian website, and an article by Dr. Mary Wakefield, “Puppies die of
Herpes only so long as they are unable to mount a fever response, or have the
lower body temperature of neonates. After 3 weeks of age puppies can
raise their body temperatures high enough to resist the overwhelming
infection which results in death. The treatment for Herpes in young
puppies with the appropriate signs is elevation of the body temperature.
Check with your veterinarian if you think this may be the problem in
your litter under three weeks of age.” The problem with that advice is
that by the time one has a clue to the presence of the disease (the first
dead or dying puppy), it is too late. The others are likely to have been just
as chilled during a period of exposure to the virus. And in weakened pups,
the virus can replicate like wildfire.
Unfortunately, the
Wakefield piece, while very helpful overall, has some minor problems. For
example, she states, “The best way of preventing newborn puppies from
acquiring the disease is to quarantine them and their dam from 3 weeks prior
to birth and 3 weeks after whelping.” If the virus is everywhere, as it
almost always is, that is no solution. There are only two ways (1.5, really)
that I have confidence in to prevent neonatal deaths from herpes: elevated
ambient temperature during the first three weeks, and the possibility of the
Merial vaccine (but still, I would not lower the thermostat!). Wakefield
says, “Herpes infection of the dam which does not result in abortion may
result in low birth weight, weak, or stillborn puppies.” And, she says
that titres show herpes activity in 80% of bitches who had lost their
litters, even though there was no bacterial blame. Wakefield advocates isolation,
but I believe that’s a lost cause; Merial states, “The virus does not come
from bad kennels – it is already everywhere!”
Since immunity is
very short-lived, contracting the problem again and again is to be expected.
Dogs have fluctuating titre levels all the time, some of it due to new
exposures, some due to stress-released previously dormant particles.
In the next few
paragraphs, I will quote from my book, The Total German Shepherd Dog
http://www.Hoflin.com and give you what
we used to know about it. Then I will return to some of the reports and
difficulties that exist early in 2004. I certainly hope they will be resolved
by year’s end!
Herpes — There are
many organisms in the virus family called herpes, the most common in dogs
being the puppy killer at ages of around two weeks or less. Herpes seems to
be present in most dogs most of the time, but some pups are more susceptible
or under more stress, which lowers their resistance. New puppies that are not
given adequate drying, heat, and nursing opportunity (internal warming) right
after delivery are most at risk. Once the disease has been noticed in a
litter, few survive. Prevention is the only remedy in nearly all cases. It is
practically unstoppable once noticed.
Neonatal deaths and
Herpes viremia — This syndrome, caused by a herpes virus, is a major cause of
death in pups between five days and three weeks, and may take two weeks to
spread through the litter. “Herpes” actually refers to a class of several
viruses, so you may encounter the word used in the context of a human
disease, or a disease in other animals. One of this class will not produce
the same disease as will another. With this viremia, death from kidney and
liver failure usually occurs within eighteen hours; symptoms include constant
crying, shallow and rapid breathing, loss of appetite and coordination, and a
soft, yellowish green stool with no particular odour. The stool symptom can
be easily missed if the bitch is cleaning her pups to make them defecate.
Treatment includes
elevating the environmental temperature, thus creating a sort of artificial
fever since fever is one of nature's ways of fighting virus organisms. Close
to one hundred degrees F (38 C) for the first three or more hours
post-parturition is a recommended ambient temperature, followed by 90 to 95
degrees for another 24 hours. Some people who have worries about the
drying-out effect of such high temperatures frequently give the pups glucose
solution and formula to prevent dehydration, but I have had hundreds of
puppies born to my bitches without that. I just make sure that the floor is
warm or insulated, and the heat lamp, heating pad, or low-hanging light bulb
is on when the dam is going out to “potty” for the first weeks. Herpes
thrives even as high as between 91 and 98.6 degrees F (33 to 37 degrees C),
and chilled pups are especially susceptible. At 100 or 101 degrees the virus
stops replicating, so the object is to get the pup's body temperature up to
that which is considered normal in the adult, about 102 degrees. After
three weeks of age, the pup's body temperature is usually high enough to
prevent herpes growth, and by then they have developed the shiver reflex,
which is another heat-regulating mechanism. However, because damage to kidneys
may not produce symptoms until as late as ten months of age, perhaps the
surviving pups (in a litter with pups known to be dying of hypothermia
-exacerbated herpes) that show the crying symptom associated with haemorrhage
and necrosis should be euthanized right away. Ask your veterinarian about
treatment with a preparation, Vira A, designed for human herpes encephalitis,
or he may have more recent advances. But I have not seen any good results
from any kind of treatment. A few pups will survive now and then, but
regardless of treatment (other than elevated temperature).
This virus can
remain latent for many months and be reactivated by stress or an
immunosuppressive agent such as a shot of cortisone or similar steroid. Thus,
pups that contract a marginal infection but not enough to be fatal, might
still have their immune system weakened, or else harbour the inactive virus.
Pups seem to get the virus through the saliva of their infected dam, though a
few may contract it in the birth canal or even in the uterus before birth. If
you have a kennel in which two or more bitches are producing litters and one
loses a litter to herpes, what should you do to save the next litter? Besides
the usual step of cleaning everything with a dilute bleach solution (as with
parvo or other viral infections), you may find success by having your
veterinarian inject them with serum obtained from the bitch that lost the
litter. You may also succeed by keeping them in the high temperature
environment mentioned above.
That was the state
of our knowledge in the last couple decades of the 20th Century. We had come
only so far as determining that herpes had about 90% mortality in
neonates. Now we may be on the brink of an advance in knowledge,
unfortunately brought on by an alarming increase in failures in the dog
breeding community. For some 10 or 15 years, I have been hearing more and
more complaints about bitches not conceiving. And this is a day when
companies like Synbiotics can help us zero in on the exact best time to
inseminate. Progesterone, LH, and other hormones can be tracked with simple
and fast test kits, and give far better accuracy than the vaginal cytology
(study of the changing shape of cells lining the uterus) or the physical
activity of the bitch or even the most jaded or experienced stud dog.
At least in the
German Shepherd world, many of us have been blaming the fact that so many of
our bitches were “coming up empty” on the known use of anabolic steroids
given to many of the top show dogs in an attempt to boost their chances of
being placed in the very highest positions at the annual national specialty,
or even the preliminary competitions where success is considered in making
judging decisions at the final big show. There is no doubt that this goes on,
and we know that many of the top human athletes in weightlifting, football,
boxing, track, etc. are sterile or temporarily have a low sperm count.
But now, there may
be another factor. Herpes appears to be the cause of many or most of these
missed matings. Nobody has been keeping statistics, so we can’t tell how many
failed breedings are costing bitch owners money and time. While a few German
clubs like the SV (for GSDs) will make note of such complaints, and withdraw
rights from males that are shooting blanks, they will not hear from most
disgruntled breeders. Stud dog owners are racking up the fees and bitch
owners are getting poorer. Correspondents in England and Australia tell me it
(failure to conceive) has been going on in their countries for some time, as
it has in the U.S. Recently, reports have come out of New Zealand and
other far-flung places. “Coming to a theatre near you!” Freight and air
regulations are prohibitive, “Homeland Security” has much adverse fallout,
and even if you can get them, delayed repeat breedings are a drain on the
pocketbook. Most Germans will not give you more than the time of day after
you twist their arms for a second breeding if the first did not take.
The increasing use
of too-frequent vaccines for any and all things is another target for blame
for lack of conception and other concerns. That is, some want to point the
finger at the effect of over-vaccination on the immune and other systems.
Fewer people have other causes they want to point the finger to, but it
is a definite fact that greater numbers of people are not getting their
bitches pregnant. Perhaps the new factor in the well-known but poorly
documented rise in number of failed matings is a new herpes variety. Europe
seems to have found out that it is real. In many growing pockets on the
continent, breeders are using and reporting success with a new vaccine. In
England, for example, friends tell me of scores of bitches supposedly
infertile or nearly so have been producing very well after getting the
vaccine. The word going around there is that if the bitch is vaccinated while
in oestrus or right after the bitch is mated, and again at 6 or 7 weeks in
whelp, not only is it almost always successful, but larger litter numbers
than expected seem to be the norm.
Right now, I know
of only one company making the herpes vaccine, Merial. They have said that
[rough translation]: “the herpes canine virus is an infectious and contagious
disease caused by alpha herpes virus, which involves reproduction disorders,
losses of pups mainly before 3 weeks, but also of infertility, abortions,
and/or stillbirths. The vaccination which exists is used to protect the pups
less than 3 weeks at which age one finds the clinical form most serious. The
mothers receive an injection at the time of heats [oestrus] and another
injection one or two weeks before whelping. This is thus addressed especially
to the professional breeders as well as to amateurs.”
Merial also says,
"Visit
www.canineherpes.com for
comprehensive public domain info." and describes the virus
and vaccine thusly: “EURICAN Canine herpes virus (F205) strain
antigens; Indication: Active immunisation of bitches to prevent
mortality, clinical signs and lesions in puppies resulting from canine herpes
virus infections acquired in the first few days of life.”
Merial is
headquartered in Belgium, but has done much if not most of its business in
France, although national borders in Europe are getting indistinct. French
breeders I hear from tell me they are convinced the new herpes strain is the
real cause of bitches not getting pregnant as well as a reputed increase in
mummy puppies, absorbed foetuses, spontaneous abortions, stillbirths, and
neonate mortality in the first three weeks. Whether this will be substantiated
by scientific studies, I cannot forecast, but I am told that the herpes
incidence there (France) in GSDs is now about 40%, and expected to rise to
80% in 2005. I know I have been mostly unsuccessful in getting bitches bred
in the past few years, and I hear the same complaint from many, many others
around the world.
The virus is not
yet available in the U.S. Drug companies are not as aware as they should be,
or they know something they aren’t telling us. Perhaps they don’t want to buy
licensing rights to make it here, which is not likely, because they could
(and do) pass along those costs with their huge profits, to the selling price
to the vets and ultimately to you. Many people would urge every breeder to
get their brood bitches vaccinated during her oestrus period and some say a
booster before whelping. But American vaccine manufacturers are behind the
wave on this one. The suggestion that breeders have some vaccine
Fed-Ex'd or UPS'd direct from Europe to your refrigerator is nice on the surface,
but the U.S. Customs Bureau (now under control of the Homeland Security
Agency) does not allow “biological agents” to be shipped to individuals.
Let's hope the U.S. medical supply houses get on the ball right away on this,
because the few bitches that are benefiting (if indeed it works as Europe
claims) are getting their vaccines smuggled in (undeclared in the luggage of
people coming from Europe). That’s a risky way to get what you need, and
would probably carry a greater penalty than what might be placed on
grey-haired seniors bussing to the Canadian side of the river to get decent
prices on their prescription drugs.
There are other
causes for non-conception, of course. One person wrote me recently about the
inability to get Boston Terrier bitches pregnant, and being just about to
give up breeding. A friend suggested that she “do a sensitivity test
for bacteria near the uterus, and she did and put her dogs on an antibiotic.
(Amoxicillin wasn't doing the job.) I believe that they were put on Baytril. Since
she began treatment she now has three very pregnant bitches.” But E.
coli and other bacteria, while almost as omnipresent as Herpes and Demodex,
is relatively seldom the culprit.
Merial information
tells us, “Like all herpes viruses, CHV is highly infectious, and a recent
study showed that more than 80% of the dogs tested had been exposed to the
virus at some time in their lives. Other studies have shown infection rates
of 40-100% in kennels around Europe.” They also note, “Once the virus becomes
established in kennels, periods of high mortality are interspersed with a
general fall in the average birth weight of the litter” and “the existence of
a problem only becomes apparent once a vaccination programme is put in
place.”
The “epidemic” (not
really an accurate term here) is going to get worse before it gets better.
Drug supply firms in the U.S. and other countries need to determine if
indeed, the conception failures are due mostly to the virus, and that they
had best get with the program and serve their customers! The AVMA and
others need to address this fatal problem rather than meddle with the long
tradition of tail docking with its two seconds of discomfort. While only a
few mentions in Merial’s promotional literature (and zero professional
journal articles so far) involve “infertility affecting several bitches”, one
suggestion under their “treatment” guidelines is simply, “Try the vaccine and
see what happens”.
To the question,
“If the bitch is already pregnant, is there any point in vaccination?”, they
respond in the affirmative: “If possible, try and give two injections, even
in the last few weeks of pregnancy. Even one injection is beneficial, though
obviously the later it is given the greater the chance that the placenta will
be damaged and the unborn puppies affected.” Here again, the emphasis is
mostly on the health of puppies already conceived or whelped, not so much on
the failure to conceive. That is only brushed lightly.
My advice is to put
pressure on the drug suppliers, veterinary colleges and AVMA to get the
straight facts about the effect of herpes virus on conception failures; then,
if there is confirmation of the anecdotal evidence, quickly make a vaccine
available to breeders. We have already lost enough!