Editorial Type: Articles
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Online Publication Date: 01 Sept 1996

Persistent papillomavirus infection in a cat

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Article Category: Research Article
Page Range: 392 – 396
DOI: 10.5326/15473317-32-5-392
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A seven-year-old, neutered male, crossbred Persian was diagnosed as having persistent, cutaneous papillomavirus infection. The skin lesions consisted of round, multifocal-to-confluent, raised, black plaques on the neck, thorax, shoulders, and forelegs. Papillomavirus virions were demonstrated in negative-stained, electron microscopic preparations of homogenized skin lesions and within the nuclei of cells from the stratum granulosum. Avidin-biotin immunoperoxidase stains were positive for papillomavirus in the same cells. The cat was euthanized due to a clinical diagnosis o concurrent, severe, chronic pancreatitis.

Copyright: 1996