» Articles » PMID: 9129529

Patterns of Association with Host and Habitat: Antibody Reactive with Sin Nombre Virus in Small Mammals in the Major Biotic Communities of the Southwestern United States

Overview
Specialty Tropical Medicine
Date 1997 Mar 1
PMID 9129529
Citations 68
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The distribution and prevalence of antibody reactive with Sin Nombre virus were determined in mammals in biotic communities of the southwestern United States. Small mammals (n = 3,069) of 69 species were trapped in nine communities from lower Sonoran desert to alpine tundra. Antibody was found in rodents from all communities (overall prevalence = 6.3%); prevalence was lowest at the altitudinal and climatic extremes (0.4% in desert and 2.0% in alpine tundra). Antibody occurred in 11% of 928 deer mice, 20% of 355 brush mice, 23% of 35 western harvest mice, and 12% of 24 Mexican voles. No infected deer mice were found in desert habitat; prevalence varied from 4% in chaparral to 17% in pinyon-juniper. Brush mice were frequently infected in chaparral and montane forest (25%). Seropositivity was higher in males and in heavier animals, suggesting horizontal transmission among adult males. Decreasing prevalence with age among the youngest deer mice suggests that infected dams confer passive immunity to pups.

Citing Articles

A human pathogenic hantavirus circulates and is shed in taxonomically diverse rodent reservoirs.

Goodfellow S, Nofchissey R, Ye C, Banther-McConnell J, Suriyamongkol T, Cook J PLoS Pathog. 2025; 21(1):e1012849.

PMID: 39836687 PMC: 11785344. DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1012849.


Case of Human Orthohantavirus Infection, Michigan, USA, 2021.

Goodfellow S, Nofchissey R, Arsnoe D, Ye C, Lee S, Park J Emerg Infect Dis. 2024; 30(4):817-821.

PMID: 38526320 PMC: 10977823. DOI: 10.3201/eid3004.231138.


Distribution and prevalence of Sin Nombre hantavirus in rodent species in eastern New Mexico.

Banther-McConnell J, Suriyamongkol T, Goodfellow S, Nofchissey R, Bradfute S, Mali I PLoS One. 2024; 19(1):e0296718.

PMID: 38236803 PMC: 10796054. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0296718.


Food availability leads to more connected contact networks among peridomestic zoonotic reservoir hosts.

Kuenzi A, Luis A R Soc Open Sci. 2023; 10(11):230809.

PMID: 38026027 PMC: 10646467. DOI: 10.1098/rsos.230809.


Forecasting Outbreaks of Hantaviral Disease: Future Directions in Geospatial Modeling.

Glass G Viruses. 2023; 15(7).

PMID: 37515149 PMC: 10383283. DOI: 10.3390/v15071461.