Effect of vaccination with live or killed Pasteurella haemolytica on resistance to experimental bovine pneumonic pasteurellosis
Open Access
- 1 February 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) in American Journal of Veterinary Research
- Vol. 46 (2) , 342-347
- https://doi.org/10.2460/ajvr.1985.46.02.342
Abstract
SUMMARY: Using 6- to 8-month-old beef calves, 3 experiments were conducted to compare the effect of vaccination with live or killed Pasteurella haemolytica on resistance to a transthoracic challenge exposure with the organism and to correlate serum antibody response with resistance. In each experiment, calves were vaccinated twice at 1-week intervals and were challenge exposed 21 days after the first inoculation. Lung lesions were evaluated by a system, such that higher scores indicated the more severe lesions. In each experiment, calves immunized with live P haemolytica had lower lesion scores than calves vaccinated with saline solution or bacterin. In 2 of the experiments, the differences were significant (P < 0.05). In all experiments, calves vaccinated parenterally with a commercial P haemolytica/P multocida bacterin or with a formalin-killed P haemolytica bacterin had lesion scores that were not significantly different (P > 0.05) than for control calves vaccinated with saline solution. Live and killed bacterial preparations induced a significant serum antibody response to P haemolytica as measured by a quantitative fluorometric immunoassay. The antibody response to vaccination was not affected by preexisting titers to P haemolytica. Serum antibody titers were not consistently as high for calves vaccinated with bacterins as for calves vaccinated with live organisms. Although high antibody titers correlated with low lesion scores when calves vaccinated with saline solution or live organisms were analyzed collectively, there was not a significant correlation between the 2 variables when calves, vaccinated with saline solution or with bacterin, were analyzed collectively. These data indicate that, although bacterins may induce a detectable serum antibody response, they do not induce protection against transthoracic challenge exposure to P haemolytica.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bovine pneumonic pasteurellosis: Model for Pasteurella haemolytica- and Pasteurella multocida-induced pneumonia in cattleAmerican Journal of Veterinary Research, 1984
- Serum and colostrum antibody to Pasteurella species in dairy cattleAmerican Journal of Veterinary Research, 1984
- A QUANTITATIVE FLUOROMETRIC ASSAY FOR THE MEASUREMENT OF ANTIBODY TO PASTEURELLA-HAEMOLYTICA IN CATTLE1983
- BOVINE PNEUMONIC PASTEURELLOSIS - EXPERIMENTAL INDUCTION IN VACCINATED AND NON-VACCINATED CALVES1977