From the Merck Veterinary Manual
What is the feline viral respiratory complex?
Feline respiratory disease complex includes those illnesses typified by rhinosinusitis, conjunctivitis, lacrimation, salivation, and oral ulcerations. The principal diseases, feline viral rhinotracheitis (FVR) and feline calicivirus (FCV) infections, affect exotic as well as domestic species.
What are the causal agents of this disease?
Probably 45-
Natural transmission of these agents occurs via aerosol droplets and fomites,
which can be carried to a susceptible cat by a handler. Convalescent cats may shelter
virus for many months. Calicivirus is shed continuously, while infectious FVR virus
is released intermittently. Stress may precipitate a secondary course of illness.
The incubation period is 2-
What are the signs and symptoms of FVRC?
The onset of FVR is marked by fever, frequent sneezing, conjunctivitis (pink
eye), rhinitis (inflammation of the membrane lining of the nose), and often salivation.
Excitement or movement may induce sneezing. The fever may reach 105°F (40.5°C) but
subsides and tends to fluctuate from normal to 103°F (39°C). Initially, a serous
nasal and ocular discharge occurs; it soon becomes mucopurulent and copious, at which
time depression and anorexia are evident. Severely debilitated cats may develop ulcerative
stomatitis, and ulcerative keratitis (inflammation of the cornea) occurs in some
cats. Signs may persist for 5-
There are many serologically related strains of feline caliciviruses. They appear to have a predilection for the epithelium of the oral cavity and the deep tissues of the lungs. Some caliciviruses are nonpathogenic. Some induce little more than salivation and ulceration of the tongue, hard palate, or nostrils; others produce pulmonary edema and interstitial pneumonia.
Clinically, it is often impossible to differentiate FVR from FCV infection.
Two strains may produce a transient “limping syndrome” without signs of oral ulceration
or pneumonia. These strains produce a transient fever, alternating leg lameness,
and pain on palpation of affected joints. Signs occur most often in 8-
Calicivirus has also been found in cats with lymphocytic-
C. psittaci infections characteristically produce conjunctivitis ( Chlamydial Conjunctivitis); infected cats sneeze occasionally. Fever may occur as the disease progresses beyond serous lacrimal discharge to mucopurulent conjunctivitis, lymphoid infiltration, and epithelial hyperplasia. Convalescent cats may undergo relapses.
Mycoplasma may infect the eyes and upper respiratory passages, characteristically producing severe edema of the conjunctiva and a less severe rhinitis.
The occurrence of severe viral upper respiratory disease is rare in adult, properly vaccinated cats. These cats should be tested for other upper respiratory diseases and, less commonly, concurrent immunodeficiency diseases, including feline leukemia virus and feline immunodeficiency virus.
Lesions:
Lesions generally are confined to the respiratory tract, conjunctiva, and oral cavity. In FVR, the conjunctiva and nasal mucous membranes are reddened, swollen, and covered with a serous to purulent discharge. In severe cases, focal death of these membranes may occur. The larynx and trachea may be mildly inflamed. The lungs may be congested, with small areas of consolidation; however, pulmonary changes are rarely remarkable in FVR except possibly in stressed, young kittens. The characteristic histologic lesion of FVR is the acidophilic intranuclear inclusion body. During the early stage of the illness, inclusions may be present in sites of epithelial necrosis on the tongue, nasal membranes, tonsils, epiglottis, trachea, and nictitating membranes. Inclusion bodies are transitory. Inclusions are not seen in calicivirus infections.
The characteristic lesion caused by FCV is ulceration of the oral mucosa. Lesions on the tongue or hard palate initially may appear as vesicles, which subsequently rupture. Ulcerations are occasionally found on the epithelium covering the median nasal septum. The more virulent caliciviruses destroy epithelial cells of the bronchioles and alveoli, which causes acute pulmonary edema that progresses through seropurulent bronchiolar hyperplasia and interstitial pneumonia.
Early in the clinical course of feline pneumonitis, the causative organism may
be identified in Giemsa-
How do one knows if a cat has the infection?
The presumptive diagnosis is based on such typical signs as sneezing, conjunctivitis,
rhinitis, lacrimation, salivation, oral ulcers, and dyspnea. FVR tends to affect
the conjunctivae and nasal passages, caliciviruses the oral mucosa and lower respiratory
tract. Chlamydial infections result in chronic, low-
What is the treatment?
Treatment is largely symptomatic and supportive, but broad-
How can this disease be prevented?
Two types of modified live virus FVR-
The second type of vaccine is administered to healthy cats by instillation into
the conjunctival cul-
Modified live virus FVR-
Vaccines containing either chick-