mixing and syringes
Passive immunity
Colostrum
Pharm
Drugs
100

What are the steps for mixing a vaccine

Place the transfer needle into the sterile diluent bottle first

Invert the diluent bottle and stick the other end of the needle into the vial with the desiccated vaccine cake 

Make sure all of the diluent has transferred to the vaccine vial

Gently mix the vaccine vial until all of the cake is dissolved 

100

Why do vaccines fail

Insufficient time to develop immunity

Was stored or handled properly 

is it expired?

was a soap/disinfectant/ other chemical used in the syringe

Immunosuppression - stress, malnutrition, concurrent infection

Overwhelming pathogen challenge dose

Antigenic differences between vaccine and field strain

100

What is colostrum

First milk produced

Contains maternal antibodies

Energy -> carbohydrates

Energy -> fats

Vitamins and some minerals 

Maternal leukocytes

Other immune factors 

100

What are oral antibody products for calves? pros? cons?

Antibody products given at birth to protect against pathogens that cause diarrhea 

Pros - provides antibodies against those pathogens

Cons - speeds gut closure, unnecessary if calves are receiving good and adequate amounts of colostrum, expensive

100

How are antibiotics different

Each antibiotic targets a different spectrum of bacteria

Some penetrate into certain body tissues better than others

they will persist in the body for different lengths of time

200

How do you administer a vaccine

Always use a clean syringe

Make sure animals are properly restrained - minimize needle injuries

Always give injectable vaccines in the neck - vaccine triangle 

Choose appropriate needle 

Change needle every 10 animals - change needles immediately if bent burred or contaminated

200

What are antitoxins and antiserums

What do we do when we need antibodies right away - antibodies take time to be made after vaccination

Administer antibodies -> antitoxins and antiserums

Antitoxins - antibodies against a toxin extracted from the serum of another animal, often from hyperimmunized horses

Antiserum - Serum containing antibodies to a pathogen, monoclonal (just one antibody), polyclonal (multiple types of antibodies)

200

What does colostrum do?

Provides an antibody patch

the antibodies from the mother will persist in the calf for several weeks to months 

this allows the calf time to develop its immune system

200

What is pharmacology

The study of how drugs work

Includes - how drugs work at the site of action, how drugs enter and are removed from the body, how drugs interact with each other, problems associated with drug use 

200

How do you choose an antimicrobial

Different ones are needed for different bacteria

Read the label

Ask your vet 

300

What are the do's and do nots of cleaning reusable syringes

Do not - use vaccine syringes for antimicrobials or dewormers, or clean with soap

Do - clean with water after every use, sterilize syringes with boiling water, store syringes in a clean cool dry location, designate syringes for specific vaccine types, inspect syringes periodically to make sure gaskets are ok and syringe is dosing appropriately

300

When do you use antitoxins and antiserums

These can be administered in an emergency to get you through a few days until the body starts to create its own antibodies 

Do not provide long term immunity - 7-21 days

Prevention does - give before animal has disease at a lower dose

Treatment dose - given after the animal has disease, dose can be very high, may be hard to give enough, tetanus in a steer (may need 30 bottles to treat)

300

How do you get antibodies into an animal

Adult - antibodies are proteins and would be digested if given orally 

In newborns - Have a window of about 6-12 hours after birth where they can best absorb oral antibodies, will continue to decrease until 24 hours, stomach has low acidity, protein digesting enzymes aren't active yet

Gut closure - when the calf can no longer absorb antibodies across the gut wall

Giving anything orally to a newborn calf will speed gut closure 

300

what types of drugs are used in animal agriculture

Antimicrobials - antibiotics

anti-inflammatories/pain meds 

Steroids

antiparasiticides

Antifungals 

300

What if a disease i need to treat isnt on the label

Ask your vet - they will be able to prescribe extra-label use, they will know best drug, they will know any legal restrictions, they will know withdrawal time 

400

How do you choose a syringe

Multi dose syringes are appropriate for vaccinating larger groups of animals 

single use syringes are best for doing few animals - need to pull an individual dose each time

Allflex multidose syringes - easier to clean, easier to maintain, easier to select dose -> easier to feel/hear, no glass to break, some UV protection in barrel, can get different coloured knobs for the end to designate syringes 

400

What is the immune status of a neonate

All essential immune components are present at birth, but many are not fully functional

New born animals have an immune system that - has decreased native defense mechanisms, has naive immune cells, decreased lymphocyte responsiveness, no antibodies 

400

How do you get the colostrum into the calf

For beef calves, check to make sure calves have nursed = check every calf before it is 6 hours old, stomach tube any weak calves or calves that look like they haven't nursed 

For dairy calves - feed every calf before it is 6 hours old, 4L within one hour of birth for big calves

400

What are antimicrobials used for in animal ag

Treating disease

Preventing disease

increases production

400

What will all drug labels contain

Prescription status

Product name

Active ingredient

Drug identification number

Product description

Indications for use

dosage and administration

Warning and withdrawal times

cautions

storage conditions

500

What should be in a vaccine kit

Needles

Extra syringes

Pliers -> changing bent needles 

Epinephrine - for vaccine reactions, ask your vet

Dexamethasone - for vaccine reactions, ask your vet

Cooler for vaccine

Cooler for syringes - you can make your own

Ice packs or warm water bottles -> depends on outside temps

500

How does the newborn acquire antibodies

In humans -> antibodies cross the placenta to the fetus 

In domestic animals, antibodies cannot cross the placenta - antibodies are instead transferred in first milk -> colostrum

500

How do you know if your calves are getting enough antibodies?

You can monitor serum total protein from calves 

Your vet can help you with this

Measure serum total protein at 24-48 hours after birth 

Serum total protein is highly correlated to IgG

Goal - 90% of calves should be equal or greater than 5.2 g/dL

500

What are the issues with antimicrobials use in animal ag

They can be a band-aid for poor management, concerns about resistance, concerns from the public

500

How do you administer an antimicrobial

Follow the label

Give it in the neck unless stated otherwise

Give no more than 10mL per site