Abstract

Haemonchus contortus infection, which causes a blood loss anaemia in sheep, depleted leukocytes and produced leukopenia and a mild lymphopenia. Thymus atrophy, a decreased size of spleen and enlargement of adrenal glands occurred concomitantly in infected sheep which suggested that they were caused by the stress of infection. The overwhelming change in bone marrow of infected sheep was a 4-fold increase in erythroid series cells. Primary immunization with rat erythrocytes produced similar haemagglutinating antibody responses in infected sheep and in sheep allowed to recover from infection after treatment with thiabendazole. This suggests that extant infection with H. contortus was not associated with a secondary immunodeficiency. Blastogenic responses of blood lymphocytes from infected sheep to larval antigen correlated with faecal egg counts but not with haematocrit or leukocyte values. These results suggest that the unresponsiveness of lymphocytes to worm antigen which occur during infection with H. contortus is more closely related to contact with the parasite than to the pathological effects of infection.

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