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Combined effects of fasting and diet on interferon production and virus replication in calves infected with a vaccine strain of infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus
1988
d'Offay, J.M. | Rosenquist, B.D.
A study was undertaken to investigate the combined effects of fasting and different diets on interferon (IFN) production and virus replication measured in nasal secretions of calves inoculated with a vaccine strain of infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus. Four groups of calves were inoculated intranasally with infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus. Two groups were inoculated 24 hours after onset of a 3-day fast; upon refeeding, 1 group was fed a maintenance diet (M diet) of hay, and the other was fed a higher energy diet (HE diet) of hay and concentrate. Nonfasted control groups were fed the M diet or the HE diet. Overall IFN production was highest (P less than 0.01) in nonfasted calves fed the M diet throughtout the study and lowest in nonfasted calves fed the HE diet. Fasted calves refed the HE diet produced consistently and significantly more IFN than did nonfasted calves fed this diet. Fasted calves refed the M diet, however, produced significantly less IFN, compared with control calves fed the M diet throughout the study. Overall mean virus excretion was similar in all groups; therefore, the amount of virus replication per se did not account for the differences in IFN production, nor did greater IFN production result in less virus excretion. Serum cortisol concentrations and immune responses were not significantly affected by fasting or diet.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Kinetics of large-scale production of bovine leukocyte interferon, using three viral inducers
1988
Jacobesen, K.L. | Rockwood, G.A. | Abolhassani, M. | Evans, D.L. | Chitwood, S.W. | Charamella, L.
Kinetics of large-scale production of naturally derived bovine leukocyte interferon (IFN) was investigated using Sendai virus, Newcastle disease virus, and infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus inducers. Cultures were tested for IFN production every 6 hours for 66 hours. The effect of varying the priming dose of Sendai virus from 0 to 50% of total virus dose and the effect of varying the priming time from 0 to 4 hours before induction also were investigated. Other factors explored were effects of varying the fetal bovine serum concentration (from 0 to 8%) and individual cow donors on bovine IFN titers. Highest bovine leukocyte IFN titers (15,314 U/ml) were obtained using Sendai virus (priming dose, 60 hemagglutinating units/ml;inducing dose, 240 hemagglutinating units/ml) and incubating for 12 hours. Up to 24 L (over 360 million U) of naturally derived leukocyte IFN were produced at one time.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Enumeration of T and B lymphocytes in bovine leukemia virus-infected cattle, using monoclonal antibodies
1988
Williams, D.L. | Amborski, G.F. | Davis, W.C.
Monoclonal antibodies and microfluorimetry were used to determine the absolute number of B and T lymphocytes in the blood of bovine leukemia virus (BLV)-infected cows. The blood lymphocyte populations from BLV-infected cows were significantly higher than those from BLV-negative cows. The increase in the lymphocyte population in 3 BLV-infected nonlymphocytotic cows was attributed to a significant increase in the number of T lymphocytes; in 3 BLV-infected persistently lymphocytotic cows, the increase was attributed to a significant increase in the number of B and T lymphocytes. One persistently lymphocytotic cow had a high lymphocyte count, and lymphocytes from this cow contained cells that appeared to stain with markers specific for bovine B and T lymphocytes. We concluded that infection of cattle with the B-cell lymphotropic retrovirus, BLV, not only affected B cells, but also T cells.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Ecologic study of the risk factors for environmental mastitis in cows
1988
Schukken, Y.H. | Erb, H.N. | Sears, P.M. | Smith, R.D.
An index was developed to measure the proportion of intramammary infections caused by environmental microorganisms on dairy farms. This environmental index can be interpreted as the probability that an intramammary infection was caused by an environmental pathogen, rather than by a contagious pathogen. Using the environmental index as the outcome variable, risk factors for environmental mastitis were studied on 10 dairy farms in New York. Turning the cows outside was associated with lower environmental index, and having cows drink from a stream increased the environmental index. Selective (rather than uniform) nonlactating cow intramammary treatment was related to a lower environmental index (apparently because the farms practicing selective nonlactating cow treatment suffered from epizootics of contagious mastitis).
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Sensitivity and specificity of latex agglutination tests used to identify Streptococcus agalactiae and Staphylococcus aureus isolated from bulk tank milk
1988
Hogan, J.S. | Smith, K.L. | Todhunter, D.A. | Schoenberger, P.S.
Comparisons were made among rapid latex agglutination test and conventional biochemical tests used to identify Streptococcus agalactiae and Staphylococcus aureus. Ninety-eight streptococci and 149 staphylococci isolated from bulk tank milk were tested. Sensitivity and specificity for the latex agglutination test used for identification of Str agalactiae were 97.6 and 98.2%, respectively. Sensitivity and specificity for the latex agglutination test used for identification of S aureus were 90.2 and 67.5%, respectively. Of 25 staphylococci considered false-positive by the latex agglutination test, 14 (56%) were considered tube coagulase-positive. Fifteen staphylococci considered false-positive by latex agglutination test had biotypes representative of S hyicus or S xylosus.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Effect of abraded intramammary device on outcome in lactating cows after challenge exposure with Streptococcus uberis
1988
Paape, M.J. | Schultze, W.D. | Cortlett, N.J. | Weinland, B.T.
Intramammary devices (IMD) were abraded with medium-grade emery cloth or were left smooth. One IMD of each type was inserted into a mammary quarter of each of 5 lactating cows. The remaining 2 quarters served as controls. Quarter foremilk, bucket milk, and stripping milk samples were collected for 3 consecutive days at 2 weeks after IMD insertion, and milk somatic cell counts (SCC) were determined. Milk samples also were collected immmediately after and 0.5, 1,2,4,6,8, and 11 hours after milking. All quarters were challenge exposed with 250 colony-forming units of Streptococcus uberis at 2 months after IMD insertion. Foremilk and stripping milk samples were collected for bacteriologic culture and SCC at the next 10 milkings. Mean foremilk, bucket milk, and stripping milk SCC (X 10(6) cells/ml) were 0.18, 0.07, and 0.91, respectively, for quarters with abraded IMD; 0.06, 0.05, and 0.43, respectively, for quarters with smooth IMD; and 0.03, 0.03, and 0.15, respectively, for control quarters. Mean SCC after milking (X 10(6) cells/ml) for the various intervals were 0.70, 1.29, 0.70, 0.97, 1.15, 1.17, 0.77, and 0.85 for quarters with abraded IMD; 0.43, 0.62, 0.61, 0.45, 0.64, 0.60, 0.31, and 0.26 for quarters with smooth IMD; and 0.15, 0.24, 0.15, 0.19, 0.15, 0.15, 0.14, and 0.06 for control quarters. After challenge exposure, 2 of 5 of the quarters with abraded IMD, 4 of 5 of the quarters with smooth IMD, and 8 of 9 of control quarters became infected. Results indicated that abraded IMD increased SCC in stripping milk to concentrations that provided 60% portection against challenge eexposure with S uberis.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Effects of a bovine herpesvirus-1 isolate on reproductive function in heifers: classification as a type-2 (infectious pustular vulvovaginitis) virus by restriction endonuclease analysis of viral DNA
1988
Jones, Ever | Van Der Maaten, M.J. | Whetstone, C.A.
A bovine herpesvirus-1 (BHV-1) isolate (FI) from an aborted fetus was used to infect 9 heifers at various stages of gestation. Two heifers were inoculated IV on postbreeding day (PBD) 1, 7, or 14, and 3 heifers were inoculated in the sixth month of pregnancy. Plasma progesterone assays were used to monitor corpus luteum function in heifers inoculated during early pregnancy. Low progesterone values and infertility were seen in the 2 heifers inoculated on PBD 1. Luteal function remained normal in heifers inoculated on PBD 7 or 14. These 4 heifers inoculated on PBD 7 or 14 carried their fetuses to term, and their calves were free of BHV-1 infection at birth. Three heifers inoculated during the sixth month of pregnancy also carried their fetuses to term. Two calves were born alive, and BHV-1 was not isolated from nasal swab samples of either calf; the third calf was stillborn. Virus was not isolated from the stillborn calf's tissues, but BHV-1 was isolated from the placenta. Lesions were not detected in several tissues examined by light microscopy, and BHV-1 antigen was not detected by immunohistochemical examination of paraffin sections. Restriction endonuclease analysis of viral DNA was used to compare the FI virus to other BHV-1 isolates (Colorado-1, Iowa, and K22). On the basis of restriction endonuclease analysis, the FI isolate should be classified as a type-2 (infectious pustular vulvovaginitis) virus, specifically subtype a.
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