With regard to BHV1 eradication programs in cattle it is important to
know whether sheep can be a reservoir of BHV1. We therefore performed
an experiment that consisted of three phases, In phase 1, 10 sheep wer
e inoculated with high doses of BHV1 and kept in close contact with 5
sheep and 5 calves, All inoculated sheep excreted BHV1 between 8 and 1
5 days post inoculation and seroconverted. Although BHV1 was isolated
from the nasal mucosa of 3 out of 5 sentinel sheep, none of the sentin
el sheep produced antibodies against BHV1. One sentinel calf excreted
BHV1 through days 12-17; the remaining 4 calves excreted BHV1 between
days 18 and 24, suggesting that the first calf was infected by sheep a
nd the remaining 4 sentinel calves were infected by that calf and not
by sheep. The bacic reproduction ratio (R-0) of BHV1 between sheep and
calves was estimated at 0.1, and among calves it was estimated at gre
ater than or equal to 9. In phase 2, all inoculated sheep were treated
with dexamethasone and kept in close contact with 5 sheep and 5 calve
s. All dexamethasone treated sheep re-excreted BHV1 over a 6- to 9-day
period, None of the sentinel animals seroconverted. In phase 3, the s
entinel sheep and calves of phase 1 were kept in two groups and were t
reated with dexamethasone. None of the sentinel sheep re-excreted BHV1
, whereas 3 out of 5 sentinel calves did. It is concluded that while B
HV1 infection in sheep is possible, BHV1 does not spread from sheep ea
sily to cattle. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.