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Using guinea pig as a model for evaluation of equine influenza vaccine

Authors :
Heba MG. Abdel-Aziz
Mohamed A. Abdrabo
Dalia M. Omar
Nermin M. Monir
Nermeen A. Marden
Lamiaa M. Omar
Source :
VacciMonitor, Vol 33 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Finlay Ediciones, 2024.

Abstract

Equine influenza is a highly contagious viral disease, specially among 1-5 years old naive horses. Vaccination is considered the best way to control the disease spread and outbreaks. Although foals are the main animal used for evaluation of equine influenza vaccines, guinea pigs were chosen as an alternative model in the present work, as they have a negligible antibody titer against equine influenza virus and are cheaper and easier to handle than foals. Five equine influenza vaccine batches were evaluated in two animal models, foals and guinea pigs, by injection of two doses/animal with 4 weeks apart using 2 mL/animal/dose and evaluation of immune responses by hemagglutination inhibition test and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. On the 7th week post vaccination, equine influenza antibodies titers reached maximum values of 9-10.2 and 8.7-10 hemagglutination inhibition units for foals and guinea pigs, respectively; sample/negative ratios were 0.126-0.464 and 0.128-0.445 for both animals, respectively. The use of guinea pigs as an animal model for the evaluation of equine influenza vaccines could be recommended instead of foals.

Details

Language :
English, Spanish; Castilian
ISSN :
1025028X and 10250298
Volume :
33
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
VacciMonitor
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.918bca33e97f4cf2abbe7fd0ce2dc36c
Document Type :
article