Category:Materno-Fetal Immunity
Passive immunity occurs when 'preformed' antibodies are made in one animal and passed onto another. For example a cow passes on her own antibodies to her calf via colostrum (first milk after parturition) and milk.
Antibodies can be transferred to other individuals via colostrum, milk, crossing of the placenta, vaccination, and plasma transfusions.
Materno-Fetal Immunity - Introduction
Maternal Immunity in Birds
Testing colostrum quality
Colostrum quality can not be determined by appearance. Colour and consistency only indicate the fat components of the colostrum, and a measure of the IgG either in the colostrum or in the blood of the neonate is required to determine the immunological quality.
Storage: Colostrum can be stored, however this must be done correctly to prevent reduction in immunological status and to prevent outbreaks of disease. Disease outbreaks may occur from feeding colostrum as it is a very good medium for bacterial growth. The best way to store colostrum is to freeze it immediately after milking in a small, clean, secure container. It can be frozen for a year with minimal reduction in quality. It should be thawed thoroughly before giving it the the neonate by leaving it at room temperature, or by gently warming it in water (no hotter than 38 C). Thawing colostrum at high temperatures or by using a microwave can irreversibly denature the immunoglobulin (proteins) and thus reduce the colostrum's immunological status. Colostrum can be refrigerated for approximately 5-7 days. However, this must be done immediately after milking, and it must be discarded after this period to prevent colostrum with bacterial overgrowth being fed to the neonates.
Pasteurisation: If diseases such as Mycoplasma, Johnes and Bovine Leukaemia Virus are present on the farm it is important not to feed affected colostrum to the new born calves. To prevent the spread of these diseases, long time pasteurisation of the colostrum at low temperatures can be performed. However this causes a 40% reduction of antibody content.
1. Colostrometer
- Used to determine the immunological status (quantity of immunoglobulin especially IgG ) of the colostrum.
- It should be used before giving any foal or calf colostrum.
- Measures the specific gravity of the colostrum which correlates to the IgG concentration.
- The colostrum must be at room temperature (20°C). Below this the colostrometer will overestimate the amount of IgG present, and if it is above, the amount of IgG will be underestimated.
Colostrometer colour | Colostrum quality | Quantity of immunoglobulin (mg) | Suitability for use |
---|---|---|---|
Green | Good | 50-140 or more | Give to neonates for the first 24 hours or for longer if in abundance |
Yellow | Fair | 20-50 | Only use in the first 24 hours if no 'green' colostrum is available |
Red | Poor | <20 | Only use after 24 hours for 2-3 days |
2. Zinc Sulfate Turbidity (ZST) test
- An easy, quick test to determine the immunological status (amount of immunoglobulins)/adequacy of passive transfer in foals and calves.
Calves:
Amount of serum immunoglobulin (ZST UNITS) | Outcome | Cause of death/outcome |
---|---|---|
<10 | Death | E.Coli infection; effects of diarrhoea and pnemonia |
10-30 | Less likely to die | Recurring diarrhoea that can lead to death and/or pneumonia |
>30 | Healthy | May have slight diarrhoea and/or pneumonia |
Foals:
- If the foal has not nursed effectively from the mare 2-3 hours post partum then at least 1L of good quality colostrum must be given. The quality can be determined using a colostrometer. Specific gravity >1.060 is roughly equal to a colostrum IgG concentration of >3000 mg/dl.
- The immunological status is especially important in foals to prevent infection.
- IgG levels in foals peak at 18 hours post parturition.
Ideally check ZST at 12-18 hours or earlier if:
- Suspicion of FPT (eg. inadequate suckling etc).
- If colostrum is available.
Check ZST at 48 hours if:
- Foal is clinically normal.
- Financial constraints (can only afford to do the test once).
- No colostrum available to use at 12-18 hours anyway, so if there is a problem a plasma transfer would have to be performed to provide adequate antibodies.
Amount of serum immunoglobulin (mg/dl) | Age of foal | Action needed |
---|---|---|
<200 | <18 hours old | IV plasma infusion |
200-400 | <18 hours old | Antibiotics treatment at first sign of infection and IV plasma infusion |
>400 | <24 hours | Oral colostrum |
800 mg/dl is considered normal and these foals are at less risk of infection compared to foals with failure of passive transfer.
3. Total serum protein
- It can be used as an on farm assessment of antibody levels in calves.
- A blood sample is taken when the calf is 2-8 days old.
- The total serum protein is measured using a refractometer.
Total serum protein (mg/dl) | Amount of colostrum absorption |
---|---|
<4.5 | None |
4.5-4.9 | Inadequate |
5.0-5.2 | Poor |
5.3-5.4 | Borderline |
5.5-7.0 | Acceptable |
References
Books
A.H. Andrewa Bovine Medicine - Diseases and Husbandry of Cattle Blackwell Publishing 2004 2nd Edition
Koterba, Drummound and Kosch Equine Clinical Neonatology Williams and Wilkins 1990
P. Lydyard, A. Whelan and M.W. Fanger Immunology Garland Science 2nd Edition 2004
Websites
www.sheepandgoat.com
Alloimmune haemolytic anaemia of the newborn
An alloantigen is an antigen existing in alternative (allelic) forms in a species, thus inducing an immune response when one for is transferred to members of the same species who lack it. So alloimmune haemolytic anaemia occurs when a neonate inherits the sire's blood type and drinks colostrum from the dam, which contains antibodies against the sire and thus the neonate's red blood cells.
It can naturally occur in humans (Rhesus disease) and foals (neonatal isoerytholysis) and can be induced in pigs and cattle by vaccines containing allotypic red blood cell antigens.
Neonatal Isoerytholysis (NI)
Occurs in some foals, and always occurs in mules due to the incompatibility of the sire and dams blood types.
First pregnancy from a stallion with incompatible blood type to the mare:
- Mare is mated with a stallion with an incompatible blood type.
- The neonate may inherit the sire's blood type.
- At parturition, or because of placentitis, RBCs from the foal enter the maternal circulation.
- The surface of the foal's RBCs possess an antigen (usually Aa or Qa) that the mare's RBCs lack.
- The mare begins to mount an immune response towards the foal's RBCs.
- There are no antibodies against the foal's RBCs in the mare's colostrum as there has not been sufficient time to mount an immune attack and secrete them into the colostrum.
- The foal's intestine stops absorbing maternal antibodies after 30 hours (as previously discussed) and thus, when the alloantibody is secreted in the milk, it does not affect the foal.
Subsequent pregnancy from the same stallion or same blood group as previously exposed to
- Foal is born and suckles from the mare.
- Colostrum already contains alloantibodies against the foal's RBCs causing there to be RBC destruction or removal from the circulation (type II hypersensitivity reaction) leading to haemolytic anaemia and jaundice.
- When the foal's intestines are no longer able to absorb maternal antibody (approximately 30 hours post partum) it is safe to return the foal to the mare.
Almost all mule pregnancys result in NI due to the mare lacking a factor called donkey factor.
References
Books
A.H. Andrewa Bovine Medicine - Diseases and Husbandry of Cattle Blackwell Publishing 2004 2nd Edition
Koterba, Drummound and Kosch Equine Clinical Neonatology Williams and Wilkins 1990
P. Lydyard, A. Whelan and M.W. Fanger Immunology Garland Science 2nd Edition 2004
Websites
www.sheepandgoat.com
Materno-fetal Immunity Flashcards
Pages in category "Materno-Fetal Immunity"
The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.