TY - JOUR AU - Allela, Loïs AU - Bourry, Olivier AU - Pouillot, Régis AU - Délicat, André AU - Yaba, Philippe AU - Kumulungui, Brice AU - Rouquet, Pierre AU - Gonzalez, Jean-Paul AU - Leroy, Eric T1 - Ebola Virus Antibody Prevalence in Dogs and Human Risk T2 - Emerging Infectious Disease journal PY - 2005 VL - 11 IS - 3 SP - 385 SN - 1080-6059 AB - During the 2001–2002 outbreak in Gabon, we observed that several dogs were highly exposed to Ebola virus by eating infected dead animals. To examine whether these animals became infected with Ebola virus, we sampled 439 dogs and screened them by Ebola virus–specific immunoglobulin (Ig) G assay, antigen detection, and viral polymerase chain reaction amplification. Seven (8.9%) of 79 samples from the 2 main towns, 15 (15.2%) of 14 the 99 samples from Mekambo, and 40 (25.2%) of 159 samples from villages in the Ebola virus–epidemic area had detectable Ebola virus–IgG, compared to only 2 (2%) of 102 samples from France. Among dogs from villages with both infected animal carcasses and human cases, seroprevalence was 31.8%. A significant positive direct association existed between seroprevalence and the distances to the Ebola virus–epidemic area. This study suggests that dogs can be infected by Ebola virus and that the putative infection is asymptomatic. KW - research KW - Ebola virus KW - dogs KW - antibody KW - human KW - prevention KW - reservoir KW - Gabon KW - France DO - 10.3201/eid1103.040981 UR - https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/11/3/04-0981_article ER - End of Reference