for several weeks after symptoms cease, but they no longer shed the virus once they are fully recovered. It is possible for humans to contract an asymptomatic (subclinical) canine distemper infection. Anyone who’s been vaccinated against measles (a related virus) is protected against CDV as well.
Macrophages (white blood cells that ingest foreign disease-carrying organisms, such as viruses and bacteria) carry the inhaled virus to nearby lymph nodes where it begins replicating (reproducing). It spreads rapidly through the lymphatic system and infects all the lymphoid organs within 2 to 7 days. By days six to nine, the virus spreads to the blood, as state called viremia. It then spreads to the surface epithelium (cell lining) of the respiratory, gastrointestinal, urogenital, and central nervous systems, where it begins causing clinical disease.
Early symptoms of canine distempre include fever, anorexia, and mild eye inflammation that may only last a day or two. Signs become more serious and noticeable as the disease progresses.
The initial symptom is fever (103ºF to 106ºF), which usually peaks 3 to 8 days after infection. The fever often goes unnoticed by the owner and may peak again a few days later. Dogs may experience eye occular and nasal discharge, depression, and loss of appetite (anorexia). After the fever, signs vary considerably, depending on the strain of the virus and the dog’s immunity.
The set of clinical signs that dogs infected with canine distemper virus may show involve multiple organ systems and include:
Ataxia (muscle incoordination)
Depression
Hyperesthesia (increased sensitivity to sensory stimuli, such as pain or touch)
Myoclonus (muscle twitching or spasm), which can become disabling
Paralysis
Paresis (partial or incomplete paralysis)
Progressive deterioration of mental abilities
Progressive deterioration of motor skills
Conjunctivitis (discharge from the eye)
Diarrhea
Fever (usually present but unnoticed)
Pneumonia (cough, labored breathing)
Rhinitis (runny nose)
Vomiting
These symptoms are often comlicated by secondary bacterial infections. Dogs almost always develop encephalomyelitis (an inflammation of the brain and spinal cord), the signs of which are variable and progressive. Most dogs that contract distemper, die from neurological complications including the following:
Seizures that are unique to distemper, are sometimes referred to as a “chewing gum fits” because the dog appears to be chewing gum.)
Many dogs experience occular disease:
Inflammation of the eye (keratoconjunctivitis, inflammation of the cornea and conjunctiva, or chorioretinitis, inflammation of the choroid and retina)
Lesions of the retina (the innermost layer of the eye)
Optic neuritis (inflammation of the optic nerve which leads to blindness)
Two relatively minor conditions that often become chronic, even in dogs that recover are:
Enamel hypoplasia (inadequate production of enamel to protect the teeth - distemper kills the cells that make enamel)
Hyperkeratosis (thickening and subsequent hardening of the skin of the foot pads and nose)
In utero infection of fetuses is rare, but can occur. This may lead to spontaneous abortion, persistent infection in neonates, or the birth of normal looking puppies that rapidly develop symptoms and die within 3 to 6 weeks.