Abstract

Self-cure reactions and immunological responses preventing establishment of Haemonchus contortus in sheep may operate as separate entities. In one experiment, self-cure occurred when challenge infection with 5000 larvae was superimposed on an infection with 5000 larvae given to worm-free sheep 6 weeks previously. Resident worms were rejected and establishment of infection by incoming larvae was impeded. The latter effect was not observed in sheep treated similarly but with resident parasites removed by treatment with oxfendazole before challenge. In another experiment, younger worm-free sheep primed by three infections with 2000 larvae at intervals of 2 weeks or a single infection with 6000 larvae were challenged with 10,000 larvae 6 weeks after the first priming infection. Self-cure was not incited but establishment of infection was impeded in sheep primed with three divided doses of larvae whether or not priming infections had been removed by oxfendazole. Infection regimes used for priming did not influence numbers of arrested fourth-stage larvae derived from challenge infection. However, more arrested larvae were present when challenge was superimposed on extant infections, indicating that resident worms or a factor activated by their presence induced developmental arrest. In a third experiment, large burdens with H. contortus were established in sheep immunosuppressed with the corticosteroid, dexamethasone, at the time of infection. Self-cure was not triggered by a challenge infection given 32 days later either in these sheep, or in sheep with a smaller worm burden derived from infection given without immunosuppression. Faecal egg counts, however, indicated that development of the challenge infection was prevented in both groups of sheep. Investigation of self-cure is restricted by lack of a predictable system for reproducing the phenomenon. Self-cure was induced by a single infection with 5000 larvae in mature sheep but not with 6000 larvae in immature sheep. Three infections with 3000 larvae given at intervals of 2 weeks to mature sheep did not prime for self-cure. Procedures aimed at heightening immediate hypersensitivity, i.e. treatment with pertussis vaccine or concurrent infections with Ostertagia circumcincta, did not promote self-cure reactivity in the latter situation.

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