AI Article Synopsis

  • A serological survey in France evaluated cattle for vaccine antibodies and non-specific reactions to foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) virus, six years post-vaccination ban and without any outbreaks.
  • Most cattle that received multiple vaccinations had high antibody levels, while nearly half of those with a single vaccination still showed antibodies.
  • Sheep were also tested, revealing 4.6% non-specific reactors, mostly near the threshold, and follow-up testing confirmed these as true non-specific reactions.
  • The findings suggest that serological testing for FMD control must consider these non-specific responses.

Article Abstract

A serological survey was carried out on French cattle to establish a reference pattern of residual vaccine antibodies and non-specific reactions against the foot-and-mouth disease virus 6 years after the ban on vaccination and in the absence of any foot-and-mouth disease outbreak. Most of the multi-vaccinated cattle still displayed high titres of antibodies and up to 50% of those which had received a single injection still had antibodies. Non-specific reactors were also recorded among animals born during and after 1991. Most of them displayed low titres close to the threshold. Sheep were also tested and, as for cattle, 4.6% of non-specific reactors were recorded, with titres close to the threshold for two-thirds of them. As part of these animals have been resampled and retested, sera revealed negative confirming that these animals are true non-specific reactors. Serological testing as a mean of FMD control should take these facts into account.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/vetres:2001112DOI Listing

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