Incidence of Paratuberculosis after Vaccination against M. paratuberculosis in Two Infected Dairy Herds
- 12 January 1994
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Veterinary Medicine, Series B
- Vol. 41 (1-10) , 517-522
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0450.1994.tb00258.x
Abstract
Vaccination against paratuberculosis of all newborn animals has been performed since April 1984 in two dairy herds with a high incidence of clinical cases of paratuberculosis, using a vaccine containing heat-inactivated M. paratuberculosis in a water/mineral oil emulsion. Animals slaughtered between April 1984 and January 1991 were included in the study. Histology, bacterioscopy and culture on Smith and modified Löwenstein-Jensen media were performed using jejunum, ileum and draining lymph nodes. The animals present on the farm in April 1984 constituted a retrospective non-vaccinated group, giving an indication of the initial infection rate. After vaccination, the percentage of animals culled for clinical paratuberculosis decreased significantly (7.8 to 1.8%; P < 0.005), as did the percentage of animals with positive histology (11.8% to 5%). The incidence of infected animals, defined by positive results in histology and or bacterioscopy and/or culture, however, increased from 21.8% to 25.9%.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Johne’s Disease: A Retrospective Study of Vaccinated Herds in Great BritainBritish Veterinary Journal, 1982
- Pathological Evaluation of Paratuberculosis in Naturally Infected CattleVeterinary Pathology, 1978