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The possible role of stress in the induction of pneumonic pasteurellosis.
Authors:L G Filion  P J Willson  H Bielefeldt-Ohmann  L A Babiuk  and R G Thomson
Abstract:Five groups of range bred calves (four calves per group) were used to investigate the effect of stress on susceptibility to aerosol exposures with bovine herpesvirus-1 or Pasteurella haemolytica. Twelve calves were weaned, transported, processed at a commercial feedlot and transported to isolation facilities three days later. An aerosol challenge of either 10 colony forming units of P. haemolytica or 10 plaque forming units of bovine herpesvirus-1 virus was given to two groups of calves and the third group was not challenged. The fourth group was transported directly to the isolation facilities after weaning and aerosol challenged with P. haemolytica. The fifth group remained at the farm after weaning and was not challenged. All transported animals had elevated plasma cortisol levels which remained above normal for at least three days postchallenge. The blastogenic response of all calves was depressed after leaving the farm and remained depressed throughout the experiment. The suppression correlated well with elevated serum cortisol levels. Calves processed through the feedlot encountered bovine herpesvirus-1 because eight out of 12 animals seroconverted to this antigen. Most calves seroconverted to P. haemolytica whether they were experimentally challenged or not. Where the unchallenged calves encountered P. haemolytica is unknown. Calves challenged with bovine herpesvirus-1 but not with P. haemolytica, had significant clinical signs of pneumonia and two animals died due to bovine herpesvirus-1 infection.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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