Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2465376 The Veterinary Journal 2009 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Two independent studies assessed the duration of immunity of an inactivated adjuvanted Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae vaccine against mycoplasmal pneumonia in seronegative (study A, n = 52) and seropositive (study B, n = 52) pigs. The pigs were allocated randomly to treatment and were then injected with a single dose of either the vaccine or a placebo at approximately 1 week of age. Twenty-five weeks after treatment administration, the pigs were challenged with a virulent strain (LI 36, Strain 232) of M. hyopneumoniae and the extent of lung lesions consistent with mycoplasmal pneumonia was assessed 4 weeks later.In study A, the geometric mean lung lesion score (expressed as least squares mean percentages of lung lesions) was significantly (P = 0.0001) lower in vaccinated (0.3%, n = 20) than in control pigs (5.9%, n = 24) seronegative to M. hyopneumoniae at enrolment; similarly, in study B, the extent of lung lesions was significantly reduced (P = 0.0385) in seropositive vaccinated pigs (2.0%, n = 22) compared to controls (4.5%, n = 26). At the end of the investigation period, 4 weeks after challenge, mean antibody sample-to-positive (S/P) ratios were significantly higher both in seronegative (P = 0.0012) and seropositive (P = 0.0001) vaccinated pigs (mean values = 0.77 and 0.81, respectively) than in controls (mean values = 0.51 and 0.38, respectively).

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