Abstract

Eosinophil numbers in peripheral blood and eosinophil potentiating activity (EPA) and sheep mast cell protease (SMCP) in efferent gastric lymph were monitored in lambs during infections with Ostertagia circumcincta. Worm burdens, eosinophil numbers in bone marrow, abomasal mucosa and gastric lymph node, as well as mast cell numbers and SMCP concentrations in mucosa and mucus, were determined in post mortem samples. In naive lambs, high and relatively uniform worm burdens were present 10 days after primary infection and these were associated with only mild blood and tissue eosinophilia. By day 21 worm burdens were markedly lower and more variable. There was more evidence of eosinophil and mast cell accumulation in mucosa, and numbers in bone marrow were also higher than on day 10. However, neither EPA nor SMCP were detectable in lymph. By contrast, EPA and SMCP were present in substantial amounts in draining lymph within 48 h of challenge (secondary) infection of previously exposed lambs. EPA was inversely related to worm burdens recovered on day 10, as were abomasal mucosal and mucus SMCP concentrations. Elevated eosinophil numbers were also consistently detected in blood, bone marrow, mucosa and gastric lymph node. The results suggest that host immune defence against secondary, but not primary, exposure to O. circumcincta involves a rapidly mobilised local inflammatory component.

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