Persistence of the efficacy of copper oxide wire particles against Haemonchus contortus in grazing South African goats

A study was conducted to examine the duration of anthelmintic effect of copper oxide wire particles (COWP) in grazing goats, as data for the persistence of efficacy of COWP in this host species is limited. Forty-eight indigenous male goats were infected naturally by grazing them on Haemonchus contortus-infected pasture. When the faecal egg count (FEC) in the goats was 3 179 ± 540 eggs per gram of faeces (mean ± standard error), half the animals were treated with 4 g COWP (day 0; mean live weight = 25.5 ± 0.8 kg). Eight treated (COWP) and eight non-treated (CONTROL) goats were removed from the pasture on each of days 7, 28 and 56, maintained for 27 or 29 days in concrete pens and then humanely slaughtered for nematode recovery. Mean liver copper levels were in the high range in the goats removed from pasture at day 7 (treated: 191 ± 19.7 ppm; untreated: 120 ± 19.7 ppm; P = 0.022), but had dropped to normal levels at days 28 and 56. The mean H. contortus burdens of the treated versus the non-treated goats were, respectively, 184 ± 48 and 645 ± 152 for the goats removed from pasture at day 7 (71% reduction; P = 0.004), 207 ± 42 and 331 ± 156 at day 28 (37% reduction; P = 0.945) and 336 ± 89 and 225 ± 53 at day 56 (-49% reduction; P = 0.665). Weekly monitoring of FECs after treatment until slaughter indicated that the COWP-treated goats had lower FECs than the controls, the treatment main effect being significant at days 7, 28 and 56 (P < 0.01). The day main effect and the treatment x day interaction were only significant for the goats removed from pasture at day 28 (P ≤ 0.001). Packed cell volumes increased during the course of the experiment (day, P < 0.001), but the treatment main effect was significant only for the goats removed from pasture at day 28 (CONTROL 28 d, 28.65 ± 0.52% < COWP 28 d, 31.31 ± 0.52%; P < 0.001). No differences in live weight between groups were considered to be of any practical significance. The study indicated that persistence of efficacy of COWP is limited in goats, extending at most to 28 days after treatment. However, repeated COWP administration at three-month intervals may be safe, given that liver copper levels return to normal two to three months after COWP treatment.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vatta, A.F., Waller, P.J., Githiori, J.B., Medley, G.F.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2012-11
Subjects:goats, animal health,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/21124
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetpar.2012.06.018
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cgspace-10568-21124
record_format koha
spelling dig-cgspace-10568-211242023-12-08T19:36:04Z Persistence of the efficacy of copper oxide wire particles against Haemonchus contortus in grazing South African goats Vatta, A.F. Waller, P.J. Githiori, J.B. Medley, G.F. goats animal health A study was conducted to examine the duration of anthelmintic effect of copper oxide wire particles (COWP) in grazing goats, as data for the persistence of efficacy of COWP in this host species is limited. Forty-eight indigenous male goats were infected naturally by grazing them on Haemonchus contortus-infected pasture. When the faecal egg count (FEC) in the goats was 3 179 ± 540 eggs per gram of faeces (mean ± standard error), half the animals were treated with 4 g COWP (day 0; mean live weight = 25.5 ± 0.8 kg). Eight treated (COWP) and eight non-treated (CONTROL) goats were removed from the pasture on each of days 7, 28 and 56, maintained for 27 or 29 days in concrete pens and then humanely slaughtered for nematode recovery. Mean liver copper levels were in the high range in the goats removed from pasture at day 7 (treated: 191 ± 19.7 ppm; untreated: 120 ± 19.7 ppm; P = 0.022), but had dropped to normal levels at days 28 and 56. The mean H. contortus burdens of the treated versus the non-treated goats were, respectively, 184 ± 48 and 645 ± 152 for the goats removed from pasture at day 7 (71% reduction; P = 0.004), 207 ± 42 and 331 ± 156 at day 28 (37% reduction; P = 0.945) and 336 ± 89 and 225 ± 53 at day 56 (-49% reduction; P = 0.665). Weekly monitoring of FECs after treatment until slaughter indicated that the COWP-treated goats had lower FECs than the controls, the treatment main effect being significant at days 7, 28 and 56 (P < 0.01). The day main effect and the treatment x day interaction were only significant for the goats removed from pasture at day 28 (P ≤ 0.001). Packed cell volumes increased during the course of the experiment (day, P < 0.001), but the treatment main effect was significant only for the goats removed from pasture at day 28 (CONTROL 28 d, 28.65 ± 0.52% < COWP 28 d, 31.31 ± 0.52%; P < 0.001). No differences in live weight between groups were considered to be of any practical significance. The study indicated that persistence of efficacy of COWP is limited in goats, extending at most to 28 days after treatment. However, repeated COWP administration at three-month intervals may be safe, given that liver copper levels return to normal two to three months after COWP treatment. 2012-11 2012-06-26T08:02:55Z 2012-06-26T08:02:55Z Journal Article Vatta, A.F., Waller, P.J., Githiori, J.B. and Medley, G.F. 2012. Persistence of the efficacy of copper oxide wire particles against Haemonchus contortus in grazing South African goats. Veterinary Parasitology 190(1-2):159-166. 0304-4017 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/21124 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetpar.2012.06.018 en CC-BY-3.0 Open Access p. 159-166 Elsevier Veterinary Parasitology
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic goats
animal health
goats
animal health
spellingShingle goats
animal health
goats
animal health
Vatta, A.F.
Waller, P.J.
Githiori, J.B.
Medley, G.F.
Persistence of the efficacy of copper oxide wire particles against Haemonchus contortus in grazing South African goats
description A study was conducted to examine the duration of anthelmintic effect of copper oxide wire particles (COWP) in grazing goats, as data for the persistence of efficacy of COWP in this host species is limited. Forty-eight indigenous male goats were infected naturally by grazing them on Haemonchus contortus-infected pasture. When the faecal egg count (FEC) in the goats was 3 179 ± 540 eggs per gram of faeces (mean ± standard error), half the animals were treated with 4 g COWP (day 0; mean live weight = 25.5 ± 0.8 kg). Eight treated (COWP) and eight non-treated (CONTROL) goats were removed from the pasture on each of days 7, 28 and 56, maintained for 27 or 29 days in concrete pens and then humanely slaughtered for nematode recovery. Mean liver copper levels were in the high range in the goats removed from pasture at day 7 (treated: 191 ± 19.7 ppm; untreated: 120 ± 19.7 ppm; P = 0.022), but had dropped to normal levels at days 28 and 56. The mean H. contortus burdens of the treated versus the non-treated goats were, respectively, 184 ± 48 and 645 ± 152 for the goats removed from pasture at day 7 (71% reduction; P = 0.004), 207 ± 42 and 331 ± 156 at day 28 (37% reduction; P = 0.945) and 336 ± 89 and 225 ± 53 at day 56 (-49% reduction; P = 0.665). Weekly monitoring of FECs after treatment until slaughter indicated that the COWP-treated goats had lower FECs than the controls, the treatment main effect being significant at days 7, 28 and 56 (P < 0.01). The day main effect and the treatment x day interaction were only significant for the goats removed from pasture at day 28 (P ≤ 0.001). Packed cell volumes increased during the course of the experiment (day, P < 0.001), but the treatment main effect was significant only for the goats removed from pasture at day 28 (CONTROL 28 d, 28.65 ± 0.52% < COWP 28 d, 31.31 ± 0.52%; P < 0.001). No differences in live weight between groups were considered to be of any practical significance. The study indicated that persistence of efficacy of COWP is limited in goats, extending at most to 28 days after treatment. However, repeated COWP administration at three-month intervals may be safe, given that liver copper levels return to normal two to three months after COWP treatment.
format Journal Article
topic_facet goats
animal health
author Vatta, A.F.
Waller, P.J.
Githiori, J.B.
Medley, G.F.
author_facet Vatta, A.F.
Waller, P.J.
Githiori, J.B.
Medley, G.F.
author_sort Vatta, A.F.
title Persistence of the efficacy of copper oxide wire particles against Haemonchus contortus in grazing South African goats
title_short Persistence of the efficacy of copper oxide wire particles against Haemonchus contortus in grazing South African goats
title_full Persistence of the efficacy of copper oxide wire particles against Haemonchus contortus in grazing South African goats
title_fullStr Persistence of the efficacy of copper oxide wire particles against Haemonchus contortus in grazing South African goats
title_full_unstemmed Persistence of the efficacy of copper oxide wire particles against Haemonchus contortus in grazing South African goats
title_sort persistence of the efficacy of copper oxide wire particles against haemonchus contortus in grazing south african goats
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2012-11
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/21124
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetpar.2012.06.018
work_keys_str_mv AT vattaaf persistenceoftheefficacyofcopperoxidewireparticlesagainsthaemonchuscontortusingrazingsouthafricangoats
AT wallerpj persistenceoftheefficacyofcopperoxidewireparticlesagainsthaemonchuscontortusingrazingsouthafricangoats
AT githiorijb persistenceoftheefficacyofcopperoxidewireparticlesagainsthaemonchuscontortusingrazingsouthafricangoats
AT medleygf persistenceoftheefficacyofcopperoxidewireparticlesagainsthaemonchuscontortusingrazingsouthafricangoats
_version_ 1787229610486792192