Bernau Maren, Kremer-Rücker Prisca Valerie, Kreuzer Lena Sophie, Schwanitz Sebastian, Cussler Klaus, Hoffmann Andreas, Scholz Armin Manfred
Livestock Center Oberschleissheim, Veterinary Faculty of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Oberschleissheim, Germany.
University of Applied Sciences Weihenstephan-Triesdorf, Weidenbach, Germany.
Vet Rec Open. 2017 Sep 26;4(1):e000200. doi: 10.1136/vetreco-2016-000200. eCollection 2017.
Vaccination is one of the most effective methods to keep up the health status in humans and in livestock. Therefore, farm animals are vaccinated several times during their lifetime. Although vaccines are being checked regarding their local reactogenicity, side effects occur frequently-especially in the case of the application of adjuvanted products. Many reports exist about local reactions in sheep. The present study aimed at testing MRI as a method to document injection site reactions three-dimensionally.
Two groups of Merino lambs (n=16 each) were vaccinated subcutaneously into the left neck side. Two different, licensed inactivated vaccines were used. Both groups of lambs were anaesthetised and scanned using MRI at days 1, 3, 8, 15, 22 and 29 after vaccination.
The study was performed on a commercial-like farm.
Thirty-two Merino lambs entered the experiment, 16 male and 16 female ones (one animal died at day 22 after vaccination). At first examination day they were approximately three months old.
Volume differences were measured between vaccination and control neck side to evaluate the time pattern of local tissue reactions.
Local tissue reactions were visible on the skin surface and also appeared in deeper tissue layers on MRI. These deeper reactions would not have been found without MRI or, alternatively, without sacrificing the animals. Some of these extensive local reactions lasted for more than 29 days.
The in vivo MRI results proved suitable to record local tissue reactions in terms of three-dimensional extent over a longer period of time in large farm animals without the need to sacrifice test animals. A three-dimensional MRI examination of the injection site during regulatory licensing studies offers an objective evaluation that could be used in a benefit-risk assessment of veterinary vaccines.
District Government of Upper Bavaria:55.2-1-54-2532-2-13.
接种疫苗是维持人类和家畜健康状况最有效的方法之一。因此,农场动物在其一生中要接种多次疫苗。尽管疫苗会针对其局部反应原性进行检查,但副作用仍频繁发生,尤其是在使用佐剂产品的情况下。关于绵羊局部反应的报道很多。本研究旨在测试磁共振成像(MRI)作为一种三维记录注射部位反应的方法。
两组美利奴羔羊(每组n = 16)在左颈部皮下接种疫苗。使用两种不同的、已获许可的灭活疫苗。两组羔羊在接种疫苗后的第1、3、8、15、22和29天进行麻醉并使用MRI扫描。
该研究在一个类似商业的农场进行。
32只美利奴羔羊进入实验,16只雄性和16只雌性(一只动物在接种疫苗后第22天死亡)。在首次检查日,它们大约三个月大。
测量接种疫苗侧与对照颈部之间的体积差异,以评估局部组织反应的时间模式。
局部组织反应在皮肤表面可见,在MRI上也出现在更深的组织层。如果没有MRI或者不处死动物,这些更深层的反应是无法发现的。其中一些广泛的局部反应持续超过29天。
体内MRI结果证明适用于在大型农场动物中长时间记录局部组织反应的三维范围,而无需处死实验动物。在监管许可研究期间对注射部位进行三维MRI检查提供了一种客观评估,可用于兽医疫苗的效益风险评估。
上巴伐利亚州政府:55.2 - 1 - 54 - 2532 - 2 - 13。