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A sertés intradermalis vakcinázása Irodalmi összefoglaló

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149-169_Sertes_Csermelyetal.pdf (877.0Kb)
Date
2023-03
Author
Csermely, Tibor
Danyi, Zoltán
Földi, József
DOI link
10.56385/magyallorv.2023.03.149-169
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Abstract
The first generation of electronic devices for needle-free intradermal (id.) vaccination became available for the farm practice at the end of the 20th century. The wider uptake of this technology dates back to the last decade. The authors review all aspects of id. vaccination: the basics of skin immunity, the history of id. and needle-free vaccination, give a brief human health perspective, present the currently available id., needle-free devices for pig vaccination, discuss the characteristics and advantages of the method and report on the experience with id. immunization against certain infectious diseases. The skin immune system (SIS) consists of many different types of immune cells of which keratinocytes and antigen-presenting dendritic cells are of particular importance. The skin is usually richer in antigen-presenting cells than muscle tissue, therefore, the skin is an excellent target of vaccine administration. The only needle-free id. vaccination technique in veterinary medicine is the fluid jet injection, which delivers a high-speed vaccine stream into the id., sc. or im. regions, depending on the air pressure of the device [15]. The paper gives an overview of needle-free devices for intradermal and transdermal use. The characteristics and advantages of the needle-free id. vaccination of pigs can be summarized as: (i) lower dose volume, (ii) better animal welfare, (iii) reduced risk of pathogens transmission, (iv) labour efficiency and safety, (v) more frequent but smaller and transient post-vaccination local reactions, (vi) improved food safety and (vii) less amount of dangerous waste material. A growing body of scientific papers shows that needle-free id. vaccination in pigs is at least equivalent in efficacy, while superior in terms of safety, animal welfare, and labour efficiency as compared to the common intramuscular vaccination in pigs.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10832/3301
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