Abstract

Hysterectomy-produced colostrum-deprived 5- and 27-day-old pigs were inoculated intramuscularly (IM) or intranasally (IN) with the temperature-sensitive and thymidine kinase-deficient ZHtsTK- strain of Aujeszky's disease virus (ADV), and the nasal swabs and organs of the pigs were periodically collected for virus isolation. No abnormal clinical signs were observed in these pigs, except for a mild febrile response. Viral shedding in the nasal swabs with low titers was detected in the pigs inoculated IN between postinoculation day (PID) 1 and 5, but not in those of the pigs inoculated IM. No contact infection, however, occurred in the cohabiting pigs. Viruses with low titers were isolated only from the muscles and lymph nodes at the site of inoculation in the pigs inoculated IM on PID 2 and 4, but not from any organs of the pigs inoculated IN. To investigate the ability of the ZHtsTK- strain to establish a latent infection in pigs, the pigs inoculated IM or IN with the ZHtsTK- strain were treated with prednisolone. No virus was detected in the trigeminal ganglia or the nasal swabs collected after prednisolone treatment by the cocultivation method. The immunological evaluation demonstrated that immunization of pigs with this strain was effective in preventing clinical signs caused by ADV infection. The duration of virus shedding was markedly shortened in immunized pigs, particularly in those immunized twice and the total quantity of virus recovered from immunized pigs was reduced in comparison with unimmunized pigs.

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