Comparative efficiency of moxidectin gel or ivermectin paste for cyathostome control in young horses |
| |
Authors: | Craig R. Reinemeyer DVM PhD Bill C. Clymer PhD |
| |
Affiliation: | a Authors' addresses: 1East Tennessee Clinical Research, Inc., 1717 Western Avenue, Knoxville, TN 37921: 2Fort Dodge Animal Health, 11395 South Western Street, Amarillo, Tx 79118 |
| |
Abstract: | Thirty-six young horses were allocated to three similar groups. Horses in Group 1 were treated with moxidectin gel on Days 0, 90, and 180, Group 2 horses received ivermectin paste on Days 0, 60, 120, and 180, and horses in Group 3 were untreated controls. All horses were maintained on a common pasture for the first 180 days. Immediately after the final scheduled deworming, each group was moved to a separate, clean pasture where it remained until Day 360. At monthly intervals, fecal egg counts, body weights, body condition scores, and pasture larval counts were measured. The cumulative costs of both deworming regimens were calculated. Young horses treated three times at 90-day intervals with moxidectin gel had significantly lower monthly fecal egg counts than untreated controls from Days 30 through 300. Horses given ivermectin paste four times at 60-day intervals had significantly lower egg counts than controls 30 days after each treatment and 60 days after the third dose. Average daily gains of treated horses were significantly greater than controls from Days 120 through 360 (moxidectin) and from Days 210 through 360 (ivermectin). Quarterly moxidectin treatments reduced egg counts more effectively and cost less than ivermectin given bimonthly. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|