Hughes G J, Kitching R P, Woolhouse M E J
Institute for Animal Health, Pirbright Laboratory, Woking, Surrey, UK.
J Comp Pathol. 2002 Jul;127(1):22-9. doi: 10.1053/jcpa.2002.0560.
Unlike foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in cattle and pigs, which spreads rapidly, resulting in easily detectable foci of clinical infection, the disease in sheep is characterized by restricted transmission, low morbidity and sporadic clinical cases. The study described was designed to investigate whether the ability of sheep to transmit and maintain FMD virus was dose-related. The viral isolate used was known to be associated epidemiologically with rapid fade-out of transmission within sheep flocks. Five separate transmission experiments were performed, with different doses of FMD virus, each experiment containing five intranasally inoculated donor sheep and 10 in-contact recipient sheep. The lowest dose required to cause clinical infection by inoculation (10(4) 50% tissue culture infectious doses; 10(4) TCID50) was also the optimum dose for producing in-contact transmission. Inoculation of donor sheep with higher doses (10(5) and 10(6) TCID50) resulted in reduced transmission, characterized by reduced duration and degree of viraemia and an early humoral and cell-mediated immune response. Principal component analysis was used to interpret the complex interactions of the dose-related responses to infection.
与牛和猪的口蹄疫(FMD)不同,牛和猪的口蹄疫传播迅速,会形成易于检测到的临床感染病灶,而绵羊的口蹄疫特点是传播受限、发病率低且临床病例呈散发性。所述研究旨在调查绵羊传播和维持口蹄疫病毒的能力是否与剂量相关。所使用的病毒分离株在流行病学上已知与羊群内传播迅速消失有关。进行了五项独立的传播实验,使用不同剂量的口蹄疫病毒,每项实验包含五只经鼻接种的供体绵羊和十只接触感染的受体绵羊。通过接种引起临床感染所需的最低剂量(10⁴ 50%组织培养感染剂量;10⁴ TCID50)也是产生接触感染传播的最佳剂量。用较高剂量(10⁵ 和10⁶ TCID50)接种供体绵羊导致传播减少,其特征为病毒血症持续时间和程度降低以及早期体液和细胞介导免疫反应。主成分分析用于解释感染的剂量相关反应的复杂相互作用。