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  • Title: Responses of horses vaccinated with avirulent modified-live equine arteritis virus propagated in the E. Derm (NBL-6) cell line to nasal inoculation with virulent virus.
    Author: McCollum WH.
    Journal: Am J Vet Res; 1986 Sep; 47(9):1931-4. PubMed ID: 3021027.
    Abstract:
    Nineteen horses with no prior experience with equine arteritis virus (EAV) were inoculated IM with an avirulent live-virus vaccine against equine viral arteritis; the vaccinal virus had been passaged serially 131 times in primary cell cultures of equine kidney, 111 times in primary cell cultures of rabbit kidney, and 16 times in an equine dermis cell line (EAV HK-131/RK-111/ED-16). Three or 4 of the vaccinated horses each, along with appropriate nonvaccinated controls, were inoculated nasally with virulent EAV at each of months 3, 6, 9, 12, 18, and 24 after they were vaccinated. The following was concluded: Vaccination did not induce clinical signs of disease in any horse and, thus, seemed safe for use in the field. All vaccinated horses (n = 19) developed serum-neutralizing antibodies to EAV. Fourteen of the vaccinated horses were completely protected from clinical arteritis when exposed to large doses of virulent EAV. Four were partially protected, and one had little or no protection. Six of 13 nonvaccinated horses died of acute arteritis, and the remaining 7 horses experienced severe signs of disease, but survived the infection. All horses (n = 32), whether vaccinated or not, became infected when inoculated nasally with virulent EAV. Virus was recovered from 17 of the 19 vaccinated horses, and all 19 had a secondary humoral immune response. The duration and severity of thermal reaction and persistence of virus were more transitory in vaccinated horses than in the nonvaccinated controls. Protection afforded by this vaccine can persist for at least 24 months, the maximal time after horses were vaccinated that immunity was challenged in the present study.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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