EXPERIMENTAL OESOPHAGOSTOMUM DENTATUM INFECTIONS IN THE PIG - WORM POPULATIONS RESULTING FROM TRICKLE INFECTIONS WITH 3 DOSE LEVELS OF LARVAE

Citation
A. Roepstorff et al., EXPERIMENTAL OESOPHAGOSTOMUM DENTATUM INFECTIONS IN THE PIG - WORM POPULATIONS RESULTING FROM TRICKLE INFECTIONS WITH 3 DOSE LEVELS OF LARVAE, International journal for parasitology, 26(4), 1996, pp. 399-408
Citations number
41
Categorie Soggetti
Parasitiology
ISSN journal
00207519
Volume
26
Issue
4
Year of publication
1996
Pages
399 - 408
Database
ISI
SICI code
0020-7519(1996)26:4<399:EODIIT>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
This paper describes the worm populations in pigs experimentally infec ted by trickle infections with different dose levels of the nodular wo rm, Oesophagostomum dentatum. Four groups each of 20 helminth naive pi gs, 10-12 weeks old, were inoculated with 0 (group 1), 100 (group 2), 1000 (group 3), or 10,000 (group 4) infective larvae twice weekly, and the pigs were killed after 10-13 weeks. No overt clinical signs were observed, and only group 4 had slightly lower food conversion rate (P < 0.05) than the controls. Faecal egg counts revealed that the nodular worms in pigs of groups 2 and 3 had a short prepatent period (3-4 In weeks) and a fairly stable egg output, while the worms in the pigs of group 4 had prepatent periods of 3-10 weeks and low, unstable egg excr etion. The mean worm burdens increased with the dose rate (group 2: 92 9 worms; group 3: 7467 worms; group 4: 19,847 worms), but detailed ana lyses of the worm populations from 10 pigs from each of the infected g roups revealed a clear dose-dependency in worm recovery, percentage ad ult worms, worm lengths and female fecundity, as all these measures de clined significantly with increasing dose level. The adult worms seeme d to be shorter and less fertile when they were located posteriorly to their predilection site, and especially in group 4 many stunted infer tile adults measuring only 2-5 mm were found in the posterior half of the colon, but there were no indications of worm expulsion. Superimpos ed on the main experiment was a cohort study in which 4 pigs of group 3 were given a single dose of 1000 pyrantel resistant larvae at day 56 (all other larvae were pyrantel sensitive), treated with 28 mg pyrant el per kg body weight at day 85 and killed at day 90. Appropriate cont rol groups were included. The mean establishment of the cohort was sim ilar to previously uninfected controls, but between-animal variation w as much higher in the trickle infected group. Copyright (C) 1996 Austr alian Society for Parasitology.