Vaccination of calves against common respiratory viruses in the face of maternally derived antibodies(IFOMA).

Vaccination of calves against common respiratory viruses in the face of maternally derived antibodies(IFOMA). Anim Health Res Rev. 2016 Apr 4;:1-6 Authors: Chamorro MF, Woolums A, Walz PH Abstract Vaccination of calves in the face of maternal antibodies (IFOMA) often does not result in seroconversion as maternally derived immunity interferes with the activation of adequate antibody responses to vaccination; however, it can prime T and B cell memory responses that protect calves against clinical disease when maternal immunity has decayed. The activation of B and T cell memory responses in calves vaccinated IFOMA varies and is affected by several factors, including age, level of maternal immunity, type of vaccine, and route of administration. These factors influence the adequate priming of humoral and cell mediated immune responses and the outcome of vaccination. The failure to adequately prime immune memory after vaccination IFOMA could result in lack of clinical protection and increased risk of viremia and/or virus shedding. PMID: 27039687 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Animal Health Research Reviews - Category: Veterinary Research Authors: Tags: Anim Health Res Rev Source Type: research