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ENTERITIS IN FOALS INDUCED BY ROTAVIRUS AND ENTEROTOXIGENIC <i>ESCHERICHIA COLI</i>

25

Citations

11

References

1982

Year

Abstract

Colostrum-deprived, colostrum-fed or suckling foals were orally inoculated with foal rotavirus and enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli derived from a calf. Neither agent given alone caused diarrhoea in foals aged 1 or 2 days, although with rotavirus, 2 of the 3 inoculated foals became depressed 3 days after inoculation and all 3 were excreting rotavirus in the faeces. Inoculation of both agents induced diarrhoea in colostrum-deprived, colostrum-fed or suckling foals aged up to 16 days. There was an apparent age-related resistance to diarrhoea which developed between 2 and 3 weeks of age. It was related to failure of rotavirus to establish apparent infection in older foals and was independent of preinoculation maternal antibody.

References

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