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. 2012 Jan;73(1):86-90.
doi: 10.2460/ajvr.73.1.86.

Evaluation of homologous and heterologous protection induced by a virulent field strain of orf virus and an orf vaccine in goats

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Free article

Evaluation of homologous and heterologous protection induced by a virulent field strain of orf virus and an orf vaccine in goats

Jeffrey M B Musser et al. Am J Vet Res. 2012 Jan.
Free article

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate cross protection provided by administration of contagious ecthyma vaccines against strains of orf virus in goats.

Animals: 126 Boer-Spanish crossbred goats (3 to 20 days old).

Procedures: 85 goats were vaccinated with a goat-derived contagious ecthyma vaccine. Of these, 41 were challenge exposed with the virus strain for the contagious ecthyma vaccine, 40 were challenge exposed with a more virulent field strain of orf virus, and 4 were lost to predation or died. Another 41 goats were vaccinated with a vaccine produced from a more virulent field strain of orf virus; of these, 18 were challenge exposed with the virus strain of the goat-derived contagious ecthyma vaccine, 18 were challenge exposed with the more virulent field strain of orf virus, and 5 were lost to predation or died.

Results: Vaccination with the goat-derived contagious ecthyma vaccine did not significantly reduce the number of goats with lesions or lesion severity caused by challenge exposure with the more virulent field strain of orf virus. Vaccination with the vaccine produced from the more virulent field strain of orf virus significantly reduced the number of goats with lesions attributable to challenge exposure with the virus strain of the goat-derived contagious ecthyma vaccine, but it failed to significantly reduce lesion severity.

Conclusions and clinical relevance: Vaccination did not result in cross protection for the 2 strains of orf virus. This may have been attributable to antigenic differences and may be a factor in outbreaks of contagious ecthyma in vaccinated goats.

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