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parvovirus

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parvovirus (pär'vōvī`rəs), any of several small DNA viruses that cause several diseases in animals, including humans. In humans, parvoviruses cause fifth disease, or erythema infectiosum, an acute disease usually affecting young children. Symptoms include a rash that spreads from the cheeks (hence the common name slap-cheek disease) to the extremities, low fever, fatigue, and, in adults, mild to severe joint pain and swelling. Treatment consists of bed rest, fluids, and acetaminophen acetaminophen , an analgesic and fever-reducing medicine similar in effect to aspirin. It is an active ingredient in many over-the-counter medicines, including Tylenol and Midol.
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 for the fever. Parvoviruses have also been associated with aplastic anemia, arthritis, and spontaneous abortion in humans.

Dogs, wolves, and coyotes can become infected with canine parvovirus. Puppies are most susceptible to the virus, which causes diarrhea, vomiting, and fever. There was an outbreak of canine parvovirus in the United States in 1978, and it has become more common worldwide since then. Feline distemper, also called feline panleukopenia, an often fatal disease of cats, raccoons, and minks caused by a parvovirus, is characterized by fever, dehydration, loss of appetite, and a reduction in white blood cells. Annual vaccination against parvoviruses is routine in cats and dogs.


parvovirus [¦pär·vō′vī·rəs]
(virology)
The equivalent name for picodnavirus.


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This puts them at great risk from a wide range of diseases such as Parvovirus and Canine Distemper - technically they should not leave Thailand until they are four months old anyway.
At five weeks of age your puppy should be given the parvovirus vaccination.
The spate of deaths is thought to have been caused by canine parvovirus, a particularly virulent disease among young puppies, causing death in about 80 per cent of cases.
 
 
 
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