Efficacy of some anthelmintics on an ivermectin-resistant strain of Haemonchus contortus in sheep
Following evidence of reduced efficacy of ivermectin in a field population of Haemonchus contortus in Brazil, this strain of the parasite was submitted to a controlled anthelmintic test. Eighty worm-free lambs were randomly split into two groups of 40. Each lamb in the first group was infected with...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Veterinary parasitology 1991-08, Vol.39 (3), p.279-284 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Following evidence of reduced efficacy of ivermectin in a field population of
Haemonchus contortus in Brazil, this strain of the parasite was submitted to a controlled anthelmintic test. Eighty worm-free lambs were randomly split into two groups of 40. Each lamb in the first group was infected with 5000 third stage larvae (L
3) of the ivermectin-resistant strain; the remaining 40 lambs were each infected with 5000 L
3 of a
H. contortus strain of known susceptibility to the major groups of anthelmintic compounds used in sheep. On Day 28 post-infection, each group was subdivided according to egg counts and at random into four sub-groups of ten lambs, each of which was treated with albendazole (ABZ) at 3.8 mg kg
−1, levamisole (LEV) at 7.5 mg kg
−1 or ivermectin (IVM) at 0.2 mg kg
−1, or was left as untreated control. At slaughter, 7 days later, all the anthelmintics reduced worm burdens in animals infected with the susceptible strain (ABZ 98.9%, LEV and IVM 100%). By contrast, in the lambs infected with the ivermectin-resistant strain, LEV was 99.8% effective, but ABZ reduced worm counts by only 14.7% and IVM by only 10.4%. Interestingly at necropsy on Day 7 post-treatment, the egg counts in the resistant strain treated with ABZ had been reduced by 92.5%, although worm counts were reduced by only 14.7%. Benzimidazole resistance had been confirmed previously on this farm and although benzimidazoles had not been used during the last 5 years, this ivermectin-resistant strain was still highly resistant to ABZ; LEV remained as the only drug evaluated which was still effective against this population of
H. contortus. |
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ISSN: | 0304-4017 1873-2550 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0304-4017(91)90044-V |