Original Research

Effects of differences in virulence of different serovars of Haemophilus paragallinarum on perceived vaccine efficacy

R.R. Bragg
Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research | Vol 72, No 1 | a218 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/ojvr.v72i1.218 | © 2005 R.R. Bragg | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 17 September 2005 | Published: 17 September 2005

About the author(s)

R.R. Bragg,

Full Text:

PDF (54KB)

Abstract

The virulence of four South African field isolates of NAD-dependent Haemophilus paragallinarum and two field isolates of NAD-independent H. paragallinarum has previously been tested in unvaccinated chickens. In this study, the disease profiles caused by the NAD-dependent isolates of H. paragallinarum in vaccinated chickens were studied. It was shown that the clinical signs induced in the vaccinated chickens were substantially less severe than were those in unvaccinated chickens, as was expected. However, due to the high virulence of the serovar C-3 isolates, clinical signs in the vaccinated chickens challenged with this isolate were still detected. These were as severe as those occurring in unvaccinated chickens challenged with serovar B-1 isolates. Although the clinical signs induced in unvaccinated birds challenged with serovar A-1 were more severe than those occurring when vaccinated birds were challenged with serovar C-3, the overall disease profiles were similar. Substantial clinical signs were recorded in vaccinated birds challenged with serovar C-3. This could be interpreted as vaccination failure if the disease profile obtained in unvaccinated birds is not considered. It was found that a high level of protection was provided by this vaccine against challenge by serovar C-3. The high virulence of this serovar resulted in the development of clinical signs in vaccinated birds.
These findings could possibly explain the large number of so-called vaccination failures that are reported in South Africa.

Keywords

No related keywords in the metadata.

Metrics

Total abstract views: 4147
Total article views: 3966

 

Crossref Citations