Rabbitpox
Rabbitpox is a disease of rabbits caused by a virus of the genus Orthopoxvirus in the family Poxviridae, and closely related to vaccinia virus. Rabbitpox was first isolated at the Rockefeller Institute in New York in 1933, following a series of epidemics in the laboratory rabbits. It is an acute disease only known to infect laboratory rabbits as no cases have been reported in wild rabbits; it cannot infect humans.
History
Rabbitpox has not been recognised in wild rabbits, however a few outbreaks have been reported in the USA since 1930.Symptoms
- Pox lesions may or may not be present on the skin.
- Most rabbits develop a fever and nasal discharge.
- The mortality varies but is always high.
- The most characteristic lesions seen at necropsy are a skin rash, subcutaneous edema, and edema of the mouth and other body openings.