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Immunization against bovine rotaviral infection

โœ Scribed by G. Castrucci; F. Frigeri; M. Ferrari; V. Aldrovandi; V. Angelillo; R. Gatti


Book ID
104640922
Publisher
Springer
Year
1989
Tongue
English
Weight
504 KB
Volume
5
Category
Article
ISSN
0393-2990

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โœฆ Synopsis


Rotavirus -I m m u n i z a t i o n -Calves

Calves fed with colostrum from cows vaccinated with an inactivated rotavirus vaccine were refractory to experimental infection with strain 81/36F of bovine rotavirus.

In the field study, 458 pregnant cows from 26 herds were involved. In each herd, cows were selected and randomly subdivided in two groups. Cows in one group (248 head in total) were vaccinated, whereas cows in the other group (210 head in total) were left as unvaccinated controls. At calving, colostrum was collected from each cow and stored at -30ยฐC until used for feeding calves.

The newborn calves, beginning the second day of life and for the next 7-.10 days, were each fed a daily supplement of 400 ml of colostrum from its dam.

The diarrhea occurred in 86 (40.9%) calves that had received colostrum from unvaccinated dams (normal colostrum), and in 7 (2.8%) calves which were fed colostrum from vaccinated dams (immune colostrum). The disease was very severe in the normal colostrum-fed calves and 52 of them died. By contrast, the 7 immune colostrum-fed calves displayed a rather mild enteric condition, and all recovered without any sequela being observed.


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