R , Campos F S , Franco A C & Roehe P M 2009 Efficacy of

R., Campos F.S., Franco A.C. & Roehe P.M. 2009. Efficacy of VX 770 a gE-deleted, bovine herpesvirus 1 (BoHV1) inactivated vaccine. Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira 29(7): 545-551. Instituto de Pesquisas Veterinarias Desiderio Finamor, Fepagro Saude Animal, Estrada do Conde 6000, Cx. Postal 47, Eldorado do Sul, RS 92990-000, Brazil. E-mail: [email protected]\n\nBovine

herpesvirus type 1 (BoHV-1) is recognized as a major cause of economic losses in cattle. Vaccination has been widely applied to minimize losses induced by BoHV-1 infections. We have previously reported the development of a differential BoHV1 vaccine, based on a recombinant glycoprotein E (gE)-deleted virus (265gE(-)). In present paper the efficacy of such recombinant was evaluated as an inactivated vaccine. PP2 Five BoHV-1 seronegative calves were vaccinated intramuscularly on day 0 and boostered 30 days later with an inactivated, oil adjuvanted vaccine containing an antigenic mass equivalent to 10(7.0) fifty per cent

cell culture infectious doses (CCID(50)) of 265gE(-). Three calves were kept as non vaccinated controls. On day 60 post vaccination both vaccinated and controls were challenged with the virulent parental strain. No clinical signs or adverse effects were seen after or during vaccination. After challenge, 2/5 vaccinated calves showed mild clinical signs of infection, whereas all non vaccinated controls displayed intense rhinotracheitis and shed virus for longer and to higher titres than vaccinated calves. Serological responses were detected in all vaccinated animals after the second dose of vaccine, but not on control calves. Following corticosteroid administration in attempting to induce reactivation of the latent infection, no clinical signs were observed in vaccinated

calves, whereas non vaccinated controls showed clinical signs of respiratory disease. In view of its immunogenicity and protective effect upon challenge with a virulent BoHV-1, the oil adjuvanted preparation with the Crenigacestat cell line inactivated 265gE(-) recombinant was shown to be suitable for use as a vaccine.”
“Despite general support for dimensional models of personality disorder, it is currently unclear which, and how many, dimensions a taxonomy of this kind should include. In an attempt to obtain an empirically-based, comprehensive, and usable structure of personality, three instruments – The Temperament and Character Inventory-Revised (TCI-R), the Personality Diagnostic Questionnaire-4 + (PDQ-4 +), and the Dimensional Assessment of Personality Pathology-Basic Questionnaire (DAPP-BQ) – were administered to 960 outpatients and their scales factor-analyzed following a bass ackwards approach. The resulting hierarchical structure was interpretable and replicable across gender and methods up to seven factors.

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