thymalfasin and Mastitis--Bovine

thymalfasin has been researched along with Mastitis--Bovine* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for thymalfasin and Mastitis--Bovine

ArticleYear
In vivo effects of a thymosin alpha 1-containing colostral whey product on neutrophils and lymphocytes from lactating cows without and with experimentally induced Staphylococcus aureus mastitis.
    Veterinary immunology and immunopathology, 1989, Volume: 20, Issue:2

    Two separate experiments evaluated ID-1 (a commercial bovine whey product containing 5200 pg of thymosin alpha 1/ml) as an immunotherapeutic agent in lactating cows. In the first experiment, cows without mastitis were evaluated for blood leukogram, milk production, total and differential milk cell counts, lymphocyte (Lc) blastogenesis, and neutrophil (PMN) functions (random and directed migration under agarose, chemiluminescence, ingestion of bacteria, iodination, cytochrome C reduction, antibody-independent neutrophil-mediated cytotoxicity, and antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity) before and after ID-1 therapy. ID-1 treatment resulted in a significant treatment group by time period interaction for the relative proportion of mononuclear cells (MNC) in milk (P less than 0.009) and for PMN random migration (P less than 0.01). Based on these interactions, ID-1 treatment appeared to slightly increase the proportion of small MNC in milk and to increase random migration from pretreatment levels by 73% more than increases observed in controls. No significant effect of ID-1 treatment on milk production, total milk somatic cell counts, Lc blastogenesis, or other PMN functions was observed. In cows with experimental Staphylococcus aureus intramammary infections, ID-1 treatment resulted in a significant decline in blood leukocyte count (P less than 0.001) and blood PMN count (P less than 0.02), and maintained PMN random migration (P less than 0.01) while controls declined and abrogated a depression in the ability of Lc to respond to mitogens (P less than 0.05) that developed in controls as a result of S. aureus mastitis. Injection of ID-1 into cows had no adverse effect on their overall health or level of milk production, but did cause subtle and potentially favorable changes in several in vitro immune parameters. In spite of these subtle changes which might indicate increased resistance to mastitis, cows actually developed a more severe S. aureus intramammary infection based on a 9% increase in log 10 bacterial shedding in milk.

    Topics: Animals; Cattle; Cell Migration Inhibition; Colostrum; Female; Lactation; Leukocyte Count; Lymphocyte Activation; Lymphocytes; Mastitis, Bovine; Milk; Neutrophils; Pregnancy; Staphylococcal Infections; Thymalfasin; Thymosin

1989