Abstract
Some systemic responses to single-dose infection with 10,000 Haemonchus contortus infective larvae were examined in sheep already shown to have protective immunity against the parasite. The major haematological finding was a neutrophil leukocytosis that occurred after the infections became patent but not during the pre-patent period. There was no definitive eosinophilia and no discernible change in the erythrocyte parameters. Systemic hyperthermia was not conclusively evident during the pre-patent period. Enzyme-linked-immunosorbent assays (ELISA) were used to measure the secondary anti-helminth antibody response in serum during the pre-patent period when the establishment of patent infection is resisted. These ELISAs employed preparations from adult worms to represent the parasitic stages of the worm, preparations from infective larvae to represent the pre-parasitic stages of the worm, and exsheathing fluid, which is the soluble material obtained when H. contortus larvae undergo ecdysis and transform from the pre-parasitic to the parasitic phase. Antibody responses to the three preparations differed qualitatively, indicating the presence of three different but perhaps overlapping sets of antigens. The three peaks in antibody against exsheathing fluid may reflect the pulses of antigen delivered to sheep as the parasite undergoes its three moults within the host.
Published Version
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