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A heifer born to a cow experimentally infected with Brucella abortus strain 544 and reared in isolation from its birth was found infected. Antibodies appeared when it was 10 months old. The heifer calved normally. Brucella abortus of the same characteristics as strain 544 was recovered from a hygroma and from lymph nodes and udder. Five heifers out of 55 (about 10 per cent) born to infected dams and reared in isolation from their birth were found to be infected.
Vet Rec 1978 Sep 23
PMID:Congenital brucellosis in cattle associated with localisation in a hygroma. 10 74

The half-life of bovine immunoglobulins was established in a group of 60 calves suckled on non-infected dams immunised with antigens to Brucella abortus. The half-life of the "incomplete antibody" as determined by the anti-bovine globulin test was 20.9 days. Up to 45 days, the mean half-life of antibodies in the calves was 17.1 days; from 46 to 99 days it was 21.1 days and for periods exceeding 100 days it was 24.4 days. In 39 calves born of and suckled on infected dams the mean half-life of antibodies was 22.4 days. Up to 100 days the figure was 19.5 days; over 100 days it was 22.8 days. There was no significant difference in the mean half-life of antibody between calves from infected and non-infected dams. In both cases the antibodies appear to be catabolised at a progressively slower rate.
Vet Rec 1978 Jun 10
PMID:The half-life of bovine (incomplete) antibodies to Brucella abortus. 11 57

The higher sensitivity of the ABGT (Coombs Test) makes it the most useful test for comparison of total specific immunoglobulins for Brucella abortus in different secretions. Using it in the present study it was found that in 85 cows the mean selective concentration of immunoglobulins in colostrum was six to eight fold, whether the cows were infected or not. In the non-infected group calves acquired mean levels of immunoglobulins of about one third those in colostrum whereas in the infected group this ratio reduced to about one seventh. There were wide individual variations. However, mean values indicate that in both groups the calf acquires a level of antibodies up to twice the level of the dam's pre-partum serum, again with individual wide variations. Titres to the SAT and CFT are also given for all animals.
Vet Rec 1977 Jun 18
PMID:The tranfer of Brucella abortus antibodies from dam to calf. 40 28

Calvings in a herd infected by Brucella abortus were monitored by cultural examination of milk and mucus and by serological and cultural examination of 5 ml samples of the blood. Out of 129 samples from which culture of B abortus was attempted, only one yielded a positive result.
Vet Rec 1978 Feb 18
PMID:Recovery of Brucella abortus in culture from a 5 ml sample of bovine blood. 41 52

Five calves from Brucella abortus reactor cows bought after they had been on infected farms for two to six weeks, were reared in isolation and examined serologically for approximately six months prior to cultural and biological examination post mertem. One calf which had been serologically negative to the Rose-Bengal, serum agglutination and complement fixation tests for the last eight weeks of its life yielded a culture of Br abortus biotype 1. This serotype had also been isolated from its dam at parturition.
Vet Rec 1975 Jul 19
PMID:Brucellosis: a study of five calves from reactor dams. 80 19

Brucella complement fixing antibodies may be titrated independently in adult vaccinated (strain 45/20) and in naturally infected cattle by serological tests utilizing a specially prepared antigen. Serum samples are subjected to the standard complement fixation test for the diagnosis of brucellosis (MacKinnon 1963) and subsequently retested by the same method but with a saline extract antigen prepared from strain 45/20 Brucella abortus. The results obtained in the two tests are compared in five specific categories of brucella reactors. An evaluation and discussion of the test method, on the basis of the results obtained, indicates that informed diagnoses can be made in parallel with a continuous adult vaccination programme.
Vet Rec 1976 Mar 13
PMID:A complement fixation method for quantitative differentiation of reactions to 45/20 vaccine and Brucella infection. 81 37

From a series of 11 calves presenting with a clinical unilateral gonitis (inflammation of the stifle), six were subjected to serological examination for titres against Brucella abortus and to subsequent post mortem examination. Tissues from five calves studied showed similar clinical and radiological features with post mortem examination confirming the presence of characteristic arthritic lesions in the affected stifle and other joints. The immune studies indicated the presence of B abortus strain 19 antigenic material within the cells of the stifle, synovial membrane and the drainage lymph nodes. Attention is drawn to the apparent absence of intact brucella organisms and to the incompatibility between some of the serum agglutination titres and the results of the immune studies. It is concluded that the absence of an elevated serum agglutination titre to B abortus is not an indication of the absence of B abortus antigenic material and that B abortus strain 19 under certain circumstances is pathogenic to calves causing a characteristic and serious clinical syndrome.
Vet Rec 1980 Jul 05
PMID:A clinical and immunopathological study of Brucella abortus strain 19--induced arthritis in cattle. 677 81

Allergens prepared from a smooth strain of Brucella abortus (S99) were used in an intradermal test for the diagnosis of brucellosis in cattle. The development and testing of the allergen from the initial less purified stages is described. The removal of serological activity noted in some of the earlier preparations can be related to the elimination of molecules of high molecular weight. The final allergen is of a high order of sensitivity and specificity and does not cause production of complement fixing or agglutinating antibodies. Intradermal testing with such an allergen could be a most useful addition to present serological procedures as it could be carried out at the same time as tuberculin testing. As a routine surveillance test, particularly in low prevalence areas, it would eliminate the necessity for extensive blood sampling and in many cases detect the infected herd before serological tests would have become positive.
Vet Rec 1980 Oct 18
PMID:Immunological characteristics in cattle of allergens derived from smooth Brucella abortus S99. 678 Nov 27

Thirty-four cultures recovered from material of bovine origin in England, Scotland and Wales were identified unequivocally as Brucella abortus strain 19 (S19). All had the properties of carbon dioxide-independent B abortus biotype 1 strains, were inhibited by penicillin G and thionin blue at standard concentrations and behaved in oxidative metabolism and guinea pig virulence tests as typical S19. Their sensitivity to i-erythritol varied somewhat between cultures as did reference subcultures of S19. Of the total number of isolates, 11 were recovered from abortion material or cyetic products, 10 were from calves which died from a hypersensitivity reaction within 24 hours of S19 vaccination and the remainder were from milk or internal organs. From the evidence available, there is little to suggest that calfhood vaccination with S19 has resulted in persistent systemic infection in other than a very small proportion of the animals inoculated.
Vet Rec 1981 Jan 31
PMID:Characterisation of Brucella abortus strain 19 cultures isolated from vaccinated cattle. 678 43

Forty field strains of Brucella abortus, obtained from milk and vaginal samples of naturally infected cattle, were heated in a waterbath at 65 degrees C, 75 degrees C, 80 degrees C for 60 to 120 minutes. Ninety-five per cent survived 65 degrees C for 120 minutes, 55 per cent survived 75 degrees C for 120 minutes, 25 per cent survived 80 degrees C for 120 minutes and 12.5 per cent survived 85 degrees C for 60 minutes. No isolates survived 85 degrees C for 75 minutes.
Vet Rec 1981 Sep 19
PMID:Safety aspects in preparing suspensions of field strains of Brucella abortus for serological identification. 680 32


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