1. Comparison of the mucosal immune response in dogs vaccinated with either an intranasal avirulent live culture or a subcutaneous antigen extract vaccine of Bordetella bronchiseptica.
- Author
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Davis R, Jayappa H, Abdelmagid OY, Armstrong R, Sweeney D, and Lehr C
- Subjects
- Administration, Intranasal, Animals, Antibodies, Bacterial blood, Bacterial Vaccines administration & dosage, Bordetella Infections prevention & control, Bronchitis prevention & control, Dog Diseases immunology, Dogs, Immunoglobulin A metabolism, Injections, Subcutaneous veterinary, Nasal Mucosa immunology, Treatment Outcome, Vaccination veterinary, Antigens, Bacterial immunology, Bacterial Vaccines therapeutic use, Bordetella Infections veterinary, Bordetella bronchiseptica immunology, Bronchitis veterinary, Dog Diseases prevention & control
- Abstract
Healthy dogs with low antibody titer to Bordetella bronchiseptica were vaccinated intranasally with an avirulent live vaccine, subcutaneously with an antigen extract vaccine, or subcutaneously and intranasally with a placebo. Intranasally vaccinated dogs developed B. bronchiseptica-specific IgA titers in nasal secretions that remained at high levels until the end of the study; dogs vaccinated subcutaneously with the antigen extract or placebo did not develop measurable antigen-specific IgA titers in nasal secretions. Dogs were challenged with virulent live B. bronchiseptica 63 days after vaccination. Intranasally vaccinated dogs had significantly lower cough scores (P < or =.0058) and shed significantly fewer challenge organisms (P <.0001) than dogs in either of the other groups. Cough scores of subcutaneously vaccinated dogs were not significantly different from placebo-vaccinated dogs.
- Published
- 2007