Makes sense....dunno why I thought that method would only fly for viruses.
Makes sense for bacteria as well.

Why can we vaccinate against some viral and bacterial diseases, and not
others? For instance, could we produce a meningitis vaccine against both the
viral and bacterial strains? Anyone know?

On Wed, Nov 4, 2009 at 2:17 PM, Mary Jo Sminkey <[email protected]>wrote:

>
> >So they inoculate with an inert version of the bacteria that causes the
> >infection? Didn't know you could stymie bacteria like that?
>
> Vaccines for bacterial disease (like leptospirosis in dogs for instance) do
> not cause the disease (that would certainly be undesirable), they use
> inactive or killed bacteria that stimulate an immune reaction to the
> antigens in the bacteria. The T-cells can then "jump into action" when a
> live bacteria of the same strain is encountered.
>
> We actually do tend to WAY over-vaccinate our pets. Generally the only
> reason to re-vaccinate is in cases like the flu where the infectious agent
> mutates (we don't for instance get most childhood vaccines throughout our
> lives since those give lifelong immunity). Most vaccines for pets are not
> changed year-to-year so there is little reason to vaccinate past the
> original series of shots they get. There is a big push right on doing more
> research on immunity several years out so we can extend the time between
> shots for things like rabies that are often state requirements.
>
>
> MJS
>
>
>
> 

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