Publication | Open Access
CONTRACEPTION OF BISON BY GnRH VACCINE: A POSSIBLE MEANS OF DECREASING TRANSMISSION OF BRUCELLOSIS IN BISON
86
Citations
12
References
2004
Year
Veterinary VaccineFertilityImmunologyMaternal ImmunizationBison BisonInfection ControlPublic HealthIdaho FishInfertilityEpidemiologyVaccinationAnimal ReproductionPossible MeansAnimal ScienceZoonotic DiseasePathogenesisVeterinary ScienceGnrh VaccineMedicineAnimal Breeding
Preventing pregnancy in brucellosis-infected bison (Bison bison) provides a potential means of preventing transmission of disease. To determine whether a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) vaccine was effective in reducing pregnancy in bison and to study the safety of injecting GnRH in pregnant bison, a study was conducted at the Idaho Fish and Game Wildlife Health Laboratory in Caldwell, Idaho (USA). Four pregnant and two nonpregnant female bison were given a single injection of GnRH vaccine, and five pregnant adult females were given a sham injection that contained only adjuvant. Three of the GnRH-vaccinated bison that were pregnant at the time of vaccination delivered healthy calves. One treated bison had dystocia that resulted in a dead calf. All control bison delivered healthy calves. After calving, females of both groups were exposed to two bulls. Treated bison were palpated 6 wk after exposure to the bulls, and blood was drawn for pregnancy-specific protein B analysis. The six treated bison were not pregnant. The sham-treated bison became pregnant and delivered viable calves. This study demonstrates that a single dose of GnRH vaccine is effective in preventing pregnancy in female bison for at least 1 yr.
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