No, mouse parvovirus is specific to mice. Mouse parvovirus does not cause disease in mice, but can affect some types of research.
A dog of any age can contract parvovirus if it has not been vaccinated.
There are strains of Parvovirus that can be harmful to humans. However, each type of Parvovirus is specific to one species, so Canine Parvovirus cannot hurt a human.
Parvovirus in humans affects the skin and possibly joints.
Parvovirus in humans is not curable. The symptoms have to be treated.
One might find a parvovirus, sometimes shortened to "parvo", in dogs, wolves, and foxes. This single-stranded DNA virus currently is not known to infect humans.
A human can contract hanta virus (a respitory virus) if they breathe the air around infected mouse feces that has been in a contained area.
Yes
No.
Dogs can get parvovirus. Parvovirus can cause abortions in pigs. Cattle can get parvovirus but it doesn't cause clinical disease. I have not heard of goats getting parvovirus.
Toxic might not be the right word, but mice feces can carry disease. Mice can carry toxoplasmosis and if a cat eats an infected mouse, it can contract toxoplasmosis. Then if humans clean the litter box of a cat with toxoplasmosis, humans can contract it too, and it is particularly a risk for pregnant women, since it can cause birth defects in humans.But overall, rodent feces is not necessarily toxic, just unsanitary, with the possibility of spreading disease.
No, humans cannot contract distemper. It is a disease that primarily affects animals, such as dogs and ferrets.
No, humans cannot contract chlamydia from cats. Chlamydia in cats is caused by a different strain of the bacteria and does not infect humans.