Results 261 to 270 of about 127,439 (309)
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Oral Fowlpox Vaccination in Chickens

Journal of Veterinary Medicine, Series B, 1992
SummaryChickens were given various fowlpox vaccines on food pellets ‐ a commercial vaccine (strain M), and the same strain after a single passage on chorio‐allantoic membrane or in chicken embryo fibroblasts. All three oral vaccines induced antibodies at levels similar to those induced by commercial strain M administered to the wingweb.
Jieyuan, Jiang, Spradbrow, P. B.
openaire   +5 more sources

Oral vaccine delivery

Journal of Controlled Release, 2000
Oral vaccination of animals and man, to provide effective mucosal and/or systemic immunity, is largely ineffective. This is due mainly to the very small quantity of antigen that survives degradation in the intestine and that crosses the intestinal wall.
openaire   +2 more sources

Oral poliomyelitis vaccine: time to change? [PDF]

open access: possibleVaccine, 2001
For 3 decades, vaccination against poliomyelitis has rested mainly on the use of the oral attenuated vaccine (OPV). In countries where wild type poliomyelitis has been successfully controlled by OPV, the rare cases of poliomyelitis that can still be identified occur in vaccinees or their contacts and are caused by vaccine related strains.
Swennen, Béatrice, Levy, Jack
openaire   +3 more sources

Oral vaccination against pseudotuberculosis

Vaccine, 1996
Yersinia pseudotuberculosis strain M5 (serogroup IA), isolated from the faeces of a mara, was of considerable virulence for mice by intravenous inoculation, but of low virulence by oral administration, almost always producing no more than a transient infection, mainly of the mesenteric lymph nodes.
E A, Thornton, G R, Smith
openaire   +2 more sources

Report on Oral Polio Vaccines

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1965
To the Editor:— In your issue of Oct 5, 1964 (Vol 190), you published a report of the Surgeon General's Special Advisory Committee on "Oral Poliomyelitis Vaccines" together with a commentary by Dr. Albert Sabin. While both of these are valuable documents, both contain statements and points of view that should not go unchallenged. The Committee report,
G W, ANDERSON, D A, HENDERSON
openaire   +2 more sources

Vaccination with Inactivated Poliovirus Vaccine and Oral Poliovirus Vaccine in Denmark

Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1984
In Denmark a polio vaccination program including both inactivated poliovirus vaccine (IPV) and oral poliovirus vaccine ( OPV ) has been in use since 1968. Three injections of IPV are given when the children are five, six, and 15 months of age. Subsequently, three vaccinations with trivalent OPV are administered at the age of three, four, and five years.
H, von Magnus, I, Petersen
openaire   +2 more sources

Novel Formulations for Oral Allergen Vaccination

Recent Patents on Inflammation & Allergy Drug Discovery, 2008
Allergen specific immunotherapy, comprised of subcutaneous injections of increasing doses of allergen extracts, has been shown to be the only treatment able to influence the natural progression of allergic disease. Different forms of local immunotherapies, involving oral, sublingual and nasal routes of allergen administration, have also been considered
Polović, Natalija   +1 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Oral Rabies Vaccination: An Overview

Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1988
The vaccination of wild animals against rabies was first attempted in 1962 after the repeated failure of poisoning or trapping to control the movement of the disease in these species. The initial requirements of such a vaccine were that it be efficacious and inexpensive, that it allow animals to immunize themselves, and that it not cause vaccine rabies
openaire   +2 more sources

Oral vaccination

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, 1988
G, Dougan   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Oral Poliovirus Vaccines

JAMA, 1964
M D, ADAM, R C, SHERETZ
openaire   +2 more sources

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