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Caesarean-derived, colostrum-deprived swine were exposed to a broth culture of a low passage field isolate of Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae by intranasal inoculation. The intranasal-inoculated swine subsequently were commingled with their litter-mates to effect transmission via contact-exposure. Sera were collected from the swine at two to four week intervals for approximately one year postexposure and evaluated by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), indirect hemagglutination and complement fixation tests. The intranasal-exposed swine seroconverted earlier, developed higher titers and remained indirect hemagglutination and complement fixation positive longer than the contact-exposed swine. It was concluded that the antibody response of intranasal-exposed swine was artificially high and that sera from such swine were not suitable for evaluating the sensitivity of mycoplasmal pneumonia of swine serodiagnostic tests. The indirect hemagglutination test was relatively insensitive and technically cumbersome and the least promising as a practical field test. The complement fixation test appeared to be slightly more sensitive in detecting early antibody production (especially in contact-exposed swine) but it was the least sensitive in detecting late antibodies. The ELISA was generally the most sensitive procedure. Individual high ELISA titers were from ten to 32 times greater than maximum complement fixation and indirect hemagglutination titers. The most striking difference among the three tests was the persistence of high ELISA titers late in the study. All swine were ELISA positive at necropsy approximately one year postexposure despite the fact that lungs were devoid of lesions and culturally and immunofluorescent negative for M. hyopneumoniae.  相似文献   

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