Ten pregnant gilts were divided into two groups of five and one group was vaccinated at 80 and 95 days of pregnancy with a commercial bacterin containing Haemophilus parasuis serovars 2, 3 and 5. Half the piglets born to each group of gilts were vaccinated at seven and 21 days of age with the same bacterin, and one week after they were weaned at five weeks, all the piglets were inoculated intratracheally with 10(6) colony-forming units of Hparasuis serovar 5. At slaughter, a significantly smaller percentage of the lungs of the pigs born to the vaccinated gilts was affected by pneumonic lesions, and significantly fewer of them had arthritic joint changes. The average daily liveweight gain of the pigs born to the vaccinated gilts was significantly greater than that of those born to the unvaccinated gilts, but the vaccination of the piglets had no effect. There was no significant difference between the feed conversion ratios of the four groups of piglets, and none between the average times they took to reach slaughter weight. The pigs born to the vaccinated gilts had higher ELISA titres to Hparasuis than those born to the unvaccinated gilts.

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