The COVID-19 pandemic has increased anxieties for everyone, including pet owners. The disease鈥檚 zoonotic, animal origins and the diagnoses of some dogs, cats and other animals like tigers since the outbreak has contributed to those anxieties.
The 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis School of Veterinary Medicine has some of the world鈥檚 leading experts on zoonotic diseases, including coronaviruses. On the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis LIVE: COVID-19 livestream last Thursday (Aug. 27), two of the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis experts, Niels Pedersen and Jane Sykes, assuaged animal owners鈥 fears of the COVID-19-causing SARS-CoV-2 possible effects on people鈥檚 beloved pets. The panelists are pictured above, clockwise from top left: Pedersen; Soterios Johnson, host of 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis LIVE: COVID-19; and Sykes.
How COVID-19 affects different species
Coronavirus infections of dogs, cats and other pets 鈥渁re quite uncommon given the scope of this infection worldwide in people,鈥 said Sykes, chief veterinary medical officer of the William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital and associate dean of Veterinary Medical Center Operations at the School of Veterinary Medicine. As a clinician and researcher, she specializes in infectious diseases of dogs and cats.
鈥淭here鈥檚 no known documented transmission of disease from pets back to people,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淭he most likely reason that animals aren鈥檛 passing COVID-19 back to humans is that dogs and cats don鈥檛 shed enough of the virus to infect us.鈥
Professor Emeritus Pedersen said: 鈥淥nce coronaviruses establish themselves in a host, they don鈥檛 jump around; they are host-specific.鈥
It all depends on the match
Pedersen鈥檚 research career has focused on viruses that cause disease in cats, including coronaviruses. Coronaviruses can be carried benignly in a reservoir species such as bats and then jump directly to infect a susceptible host species 鈥 humans in the case of COVID-19 鈥 or travel to the host through an intermediary such as pangolins.
A coronavirus may touch other species along the way, such as dogs or cats, or even tigers in the case of COVID-19, but if those species aren鈥檛 a good match, they aren鈥檛 likely to cause much effect or be easily transmittable. For instance, a coronavirus that Pedersen has studied extensively, feline infectious peritonitis, or FIP, can be deadly to cats but is benign to humans.
This evolutionary search for survival not only means that coronaviruses search for optimal host species, but that they tend to be deadliest when they first infect a susceptible species, Pedersen said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 an old saying among virologists that viruses do not like to kill their hosts; they don鈥檛 even like to make them sick," he said. "And so the suspicion is that SARS-CoV-2 is already on its way there with humans with mutations that reduce virulence and increase infectivity.鈥
Enjoy human-animal bond
Pets have low susceptibility to the disease and are at less risk for a serious reaction than humans, Sykes said, so owners don鈥檛 need to take any particular precautions to protect their pets. 鈥淲e want people especially in this quarantine time to enjoy the human-animal bond, and participate in activities like walking your dog,鈥 she said.
鈥淩eally what you want to be doing is physical distancing as you would be doing normally. You don鈥檛 want to get close to people and spend time with them while they鈥檙e petting your dog.鈥
The pets that have been diagnosed with coronavirus caught it from their owners, Sykes said, so to best protect your pet, you need to protect yourself from contracting COVID-19 or a secondary condition that would weaken your immune system, such as the flu.
Hope for a vaccine?
Coronaviruses exist in most species, and are similar enough that a drug effective against one may also be effective against another. Pedersen tested a drug compound that successfully treated cats with FIP in a clinical study, but it has not yet been made legally available for cat owners because, according to Pedersen, it or related compounds may also be effective in humans for treating or preventing COVID-19. The compound owners are focused on testing it against COVID-19 before releasing it for feline treatments.
Another FIP drug, one that Pedersen successfully tested in partnership with Kansas State University, is being launched for clinical trials in Canada. 鈥淪o here are two drugs being tested and used in cats that are now on the brink of being tested in humans for C19 in humans,鈥 he said.
Additional topics
Sykes and Pedersen鈥檚 discussion with host Soterios Johnson also covered COVID-19 and domestic animals, like cows, chickens and pigs as well as deeper dives into the topics above.
.