1 / 48

Vaccine Basics

Vaccine Basics. Growing Herd. Mature Herd. Understand What We’re Up Against. How are cattle (the ultimate recyclers) raised? over 90 million cattle in U.S. … 50% from herds less than 30 … 90% beef & 10% dairy … of the beef … 2 years from birth to food supply 40% in breeding herds

erek
Download Presentation

Vaccine Basics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Vaccine Basics Growing Herd Mature Herd

  2. Understand What We’re Up Against • How are cattle (the ultimate recyclers) raised? • over 90 million cattle in U.S. … • 50% from herds less than 30 … • 90% beef & 10% dairy … of the beef … • 2 years from birth to food supply • 40% in breeding herds • 30% grazing • 30% harvested each year • ALL in OPEN AIR ENVIROMENT !!! … wildlife • deer, coyotes, raccoons, birds, rodents, insects, …

  3. Cattle Health / Disease Prevention… in the “real world”? Can you say “A-RITS”

  4. Biosecurity Basics for Livestock Operations • Biosecurity is a practice designed to prevent the spread of disease by minimizing the movement of biologic organisms (viruses, bacteria, rodents, etc.) onto and within an operation. • Biosecurity can be very difficult to maintain because of the very complex interrelationships between management, biologic organisms and biosecurity. • Biocontainment maybe the only practical control for many diseases. • While developing and maintaining biosecurity is difficult it is the cheapest, most effective means of disease control available and no disease prevention program will work without it.

  5. Health - Disease Complex Interactions

  6. Immunology-Vaccine Principles, Optimizing Vaccination, FPT Effects

  7. IMMUNOLOGY PRINCIPLES: definitions • INJECTION:to force a fluid into (antibiotic, vitamin, vaccine, etc.) • VACCINATION:inject with a vaccine • IMMUNIZATION:to render not affected or responsive • (protected from disease due to infection)

  8. IMMUNOLOGY PRINCIPLES • INJECTION = VACCINATION • VACCINATION ≠ IMMUNIZATION • IMMUNIZATION REQUIRES…. • Effective vaccine • Immunocompetent calf

  9. IMMUNOLOGY PRINCIPLES • For VACCINATION = IMMUNIZATION • requires an IMMUNE RESPONSE • IMMUNE REPONSE Cognition …Self from Non-Self & Presentation Activation …Clonal Expansion & Differentiation Effect… Killing Virus Infected Cell & Antibody Prod.

  10. Immune System Diagram

  11. Immune System At Work

  12. IMMUNOLOGY PRINCIPLES: • USING THIS INFORMATION … • make sure your clients have the ingredients for a protective immune response … EFFECTIVE VACCINE + RESPONSIVE CALF • mounting an immune response has a METABOLIC COST • mounting an immune response is complicated & subject to… SUPPRESSION • mounting an immune response… TAKES TIME

  13. Herd Immunity* Right Bug?? Vaccine Handling Vaccine Delivery Timing*** Challenge Dose* Calf Maturity** Nutrition*? Parasites*? Genetics? Distress* OPTIMIZING VACCINATION: Animal Husbandry … COUNTS

  14. OPTIMIZING VACCINATION: Herd Immunity • Vaccine can be “working” even if individual cattle are diseased • Works well with highly contagious diseases (e.g. IBR, Brucellosis) • Not as effective with lowly contagious diseases (e.g. tetanus)

  15. OPTIMIZING VACCINATION: “Right” Bug • Disease complexes • e.g.. Viral BRD: IBR, BVD, BRSV, PI3 • adenovirus, coronavirus, rhinovirus, enterovirus, reovirus, MCF virus. • Changes in the bugs • (antigenic instability) • e.g.. BVD, influenza virus • most are fairly stable

  16. OPTIMIZING VACCINATION: • Vaccine Handling • Temperature abuse • Ultraviolet light (sunlight) • Disinfectants • Vaccine Delivery • Subcutaneous when available • Intramuscular in neck only • Proper restraint • Correct needle size & length • Needle changes • Sanitation • Timing • BRD incubation time 7 to 10 days • Immune response takes 3 -10 days …or longer • Peaks in 2 to 4 weeks ... Best if repeated

  17. Vaccine Titers

  18. OPTIMIZING VACCINATION: Challenge Dose • Even a normally protective level of immunity can be overwhelmed… • This is bad …but disease may not last as long or be as severe. • But could be good if vaccine overcomes protection to improve immunity (booster and maternal block)

  19. Challenge Diagram

  20. Challenge – Immunization Diagram

  21. OPTIMIZING VACCINATION: • Calf Factors -- Maturity -- Genetics -- History • (parasites, nutrition, previous vaccines)

  22. Colostrum Absorption

  23. Immunity vs Age

  24. OPTIMIZING VACCINATION: Distress • some are inevitable • many are avoidable • ELIMINATE the avoidable • SHIFT the inevitable so they don’t all happen at the same time

  25. Response to Stress: Stress plays a large part in the disease

  26. OPTIMIZING VACCINATION: Calf Factors • PREEXPOSURE IMMUNIZATION giving the vaccine before disease challenge & immunosuppression instead of after disease challenge & during immunosuppression reduces sickness & death

  27. OPTIMIZING VACCINATION: PRE-EXPOSURE IMMUNIZATION • Will rarely make disease rate = zero • If disease rate is low, hard to see effect • Effectiveness ≠ Cost effectiveness

  28. Vaccine Titers

  29. Colostrum Absorption • Normal Passive Transfer (NPT) … >1600 mg/dl (TPP >7%) • Partial Failure of Passive Transfer (PFPT) … 800 to 1600 mg/dl (TPP 5 to 7%) • Failure of Passive Transfer (FPT) … <800 mg/dl (TPP <5 %)

  30. NEONATAL SICKNESS rates by passive transfer status in 263 calves(60-20-183) … P<0.05, FPT OR=6.4)

  31. Prevention … is key Treatment salvages only part of the loss Immune preparation … Need an effective vaccine

  32. VACCINES • Killed vaccines (KV) and toxoids • Subunit vaccines are a type of killed vaccine • Autogenous bacterial vaccines • Modified live vaccines (MLV) contain live altered • Chemically altered vaccines contain modified live

  33. Killed Vaccines (KV) and Toxoids • Advantages: • Available for a wide variety of diseases • No risk of reverting to virulent form • No risk of vaccine organism spreading between animals • Little risk of causing abortion • More stable in storage • No on-farm mixing, therefore less risk of contamination • Excellent stimulant of passive antibodies in colostrum

  34. Killed Vaccines (KV) and Toxoids • Disadvantages: • More likely to cause allergic reactions and post vaccination lumps • Two initial doses required at least 10 days apart • Slower onset of immunity • May not produce as strong or as long-lasting immunity as MLV products • Produce a narrower spectrum of protection than MLV products • Tend to be more expensive than MLV products

  35. Modified Live Vaccines (MLV) • Advantages: • One initial dose is usually sufficient but additional booster doses may be required • More rapid protection than KV products • Produces a wider spectrum of protection than KV products • Less likely to cause allergic reactions or post vaccination lumps than KV products • Less susceptible to passive antibody vaccine block than KV products • Tend to be less expensive

  36. Modified Live Vaccines (MLV) • Disadvantages: • Potential to mutate to a virulent form • Could exacerbate disease in immunosuppressed animals • Potential for excessive immune response • Some risk of causing abortion or transient infertility • Must be handled and mixed with additional care

  37. Chemically Altered Vaccines • Advantages: • Share many characteristics of MLV products • Safety similar to KV products • More rapid protection than KV products • No risk of reverting to virulent form • Little risk of causing abortion

  38. Chemically Altered Vaccines • Disadvantages: • Protection not as rapid as MLV products • Two initial doses required • May not produce as strong or as long-lasting immunity • Unless given on a mucus membrane, stimulates little or no mucosal immunity • Must be handled and mixed more carefully • Tend to be more expensive than modified live vaccines

  39. USDA can grant one of five possible levels of protection: • Prevention of infection. • Prevention of disease. • Aid in disease prevention. • Aid in disease control.

  40. Clyde Lane Temperature Range • 77 units (42.8%) had readings below 32 degrees • 38 units (21.1%) had readings above 45 degrees

  41. Clyde Lane Temperature Range • Refrigeration units varied from 16.5 to 55.6 degrees • Spread in temperature in a refrigeration unit • 1.8 to 25.4 degrees

  42. Clyde Lane Retail Refrigerators • 19,461 animal health products • Less than ½ % were expired • 16.1% contained food

  43. Keys to Healthy Calves Born to HEALTHY mothers!!! Born in CLEAN environment!!! Move to clean pasture ASAP … AND Keep in similar age groups 1st month. OR Move all cows yet to calve to clean pasture each week. • Three doses of ALL important vaccines before entering the herd • BVD Test Negative • Proper Body Condition Score … 6 • Colostrum ASAP!!!

  44. DGRIFFIN@GPVEC.UNL.EDU http://GPVEC.UNL.EDU Save a Cow … Eat a Vegetarian Good Luck To You

  45. DGRIFFIN@GPVEC.UNL.EDU http://GPVEC.UNL.EDU Save a Cow … Eat a Vegetarian Good Luck To You

  46. Herd Vaccine Use … ?

  47. Herd Vaccine Use … ?

  48. The Breeding Herd

More Related