1. Assessment of parasite control and weight gain after use of an ivermectin sustained-release bolus in calves.
- Author
-
Ryan WG, Crawford RJ Jr, Gross SJ, and Wallace DH
- Subjects
- Animals, Antinematodal Agents administration & dosage, Antinematodal Agents therapeutic use, Cattle, Cattle Diseases epidemiology, Cattle Diseases physiopathology, Delayed-Action Preparations, Feces parasitology, Injections methods, Injections veterinary, Ivermectin administration & dosage, Ivermectin therapeutic use, Midwestern United States epidemiology, Parasite Egg Count veterinary, Trichostrongyloidea isolation & purification, Trichostrongyloidiasis physiopathology, Trichostrongyloidiasis prevention & control, Weight Gain physiology, Antinematodal Agents pharmacology, Cattle Diseases prevention & control, Ivermectin pharmacology, Trichostrongyloidiasis veterinary, Weight Gain drug effects
- Abstract
Objective: To assess parasite control and weight gain after administration of an ivermectin sustained-release bolus over 135 days to calves grazing in the midwestern United States., Design: Replicated pasture study., Animals: 56 Bos taurus calves., Procedure: Calves were matched for body weight and randomly allocated to remain untreated or to receive an ivermectin sustained-release bolus before turnout on day 0. Calves were grazed by treatment group on B pastures (4 replicates). Body weights and fecal egg counts were recorded on days- 1 and 28, and then at 28-day intervals until day 168., Results: Parasitism was not clinically evident prior to or during the study. In treated calves, mean fecal egg counts were at or near 0 at all posttreatment evaluations. Although the mean egg count exceeded 20 ova/g only once in control calves, the cumulative egg output was > 42 million/calf. For the treated group, it was < 0.1% of this number. Mean total weight gain was 33.9 kg (74.6 lb) greater for ivermectin-treated calves than for untreated control calves (P < 0.02): a 34% increase., Clinical Implications: Fecal trichostrongyle eggs from calves can accumulate over a grazing season to provide enormous potential for augmenting pasture infectivity. An ivermectin sustained-release bolus (administered to calves being placed on pasture) controls parasitism, limits pasture infectivity, and can substantially influence growth by limiting the impact of subclinical parasitism.
- Published
- 1997