| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2454714 | Research in Veterinary Science | 2015 | 10 Pages |
•Neonatal calf diarrhea is a critical problem and passive therapy with IgY Abs is a way to control it.•There are no solid studies using rotavirus specific IgY Abs once calves suffer from diarrhea.•We provide here scientific information regarding the effects of IgY-based products.•This information is critical considering that IgY Abs are being sold in several countries.•We prove the therapeutic value of IgY-based treatment and the industrialization of this product.
Bovine group A rotavirus (RVA) is considered the major cause of diarrhea in intensively reared neonatal calves. Chicken egg yolk antibodies (IgY) are efficient in protecting neonatal calves from RVA diarrhea; however, the value of this intervention in calves once diarrhea has appeared is unclear. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the application of RVA-specific IgY as a passive treatment in those cases. The experimental groups were: G1 = RVA-specific IgY treatment; G2 = no Ab treatment; and G3 = colostrum deprived + no Ab treatment. IgY treatment significantly reduced virus shedding, diarrhea duration and severity compared to G2 and G3 calves. However, it caused a partial suppression of systemic Ab responses to RVA that could be associated with less severe diarrhea. The oral treatment with IgY for 7 days was associated with significantly higher antibody secreting cell responses in the calves compared with other groups of animals.
