Effect of fenbendazole in water on pigs infected with Ascaris suum in finishing pigs under field conditions

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Standard

Effect of fenbendazole in water on pigs infected with Ascaris suum in finishing pigs under field conditions. / Lassen, Brian; Oliviero, Claudio; Orro, Toomas; Jukola, Elias; Laurila, Tapio; Haimi-Hakala, Minna; Heinonen, Mari.

I: Veterinary Parasitology, Bind 237, 15.04.2017, s. 1-7.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lassen, B, Oliviero, C, Orro, T, Jukola, E, Laurila, T, Haimi-Hakala, M & Heinonen, M 2017, 'Effect of fenbendazole in water on pigs infected with Ascaris suum in finishing pigs under field conditions', Veterinary Parasitology, bind 237, s. 1-7. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.03.005

APA

Lassen, B., Oliviero, C., Orro, T., Jukola, E., Laurila, T., Haimi-Hakala, M., & Heinonen, M. (2017). Effect of fenbendazole in water on pigs infected with Ascaris suum in finishing pigs under field conditions. Veterinary Parasitology, 237, 1-7. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.03.005

Vancouver

Lassen B, Oliviero C, Orro T, Jukola E, Laurila T, Haimi-Hakala M o.a. Effect of fenbendazole in water on pigs infected with Ascaris suum in finishing pigs under field conditions. Veterinary Parasitology. 2017 apr. 15;237:1-7. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.03.005

Author

Lassen, Brian ; Oliviero, Claudio ; Orro, Toomas ; Jukola, Elias ; Laurila, Tapio ; Haimi-Hakala, Minna ; Heinonen, Mari. / Effect of fenbendazole in water on pigs infected with Ascaris suum in finishing pigs under field conditions. I: Veterinary Parasitology. 2017 ; Bind 237. s. 1-7.

Bibtex

@article{46c593342253480c8e11e60dd5974b30,
title = "Effect of fenbendazole in water on pigs infected with Ascaris suum in finishing pigs under field conditions",
abstract = "The husbandry of pigs for meat production is a constantly developing industry. Most studies on the effects of Ascaris suum infection in pigs and its prevention with anthelmintics are over a decade old. We examined the effect of 2.5 mg fenbendazole per kg bodyweight administered in drinking water for two consecutive days on A. suum infection 1 and 6 weeks after pigs arrived to fattening units. We hypothesised that the treatment would reduce the presence of A. suum-infections, improve the average daily weight gain of pigs, reduce the percentage of liver rejections in pens by 50% and increase the lean meat percentage at slaughter by 1%.The study included a placebo group (427 pigs) and a treatment group (420 pigs) spanning four different farms previously reporting ≥15% liver rejection. The treatment was given for 2 consecutive days 1 and 6 weeks after the pigs arrived to the fattening unit. Faecal samples were collected during weeks 1, 6 and 12 from all pigs and examined for A. suum eggs. Blood was collected during weeks 1 and 12 from a subgroup of the pigs and examined for anti-A. suum antibodies and clinical blood parameters. Data on liver rejection and lean meat percentage were collected post-mortem.The proportion of Ascaris seropositive pigs changed from 8.6% to 22.2% and 20.3% to 16.3% in the placebo and treatment group respectively. Fenbendazole reduced the presence of A. suum eggs in faeces the percentage of liver rejections by 69.8%. The treatment did not affect daily weight gain or lean meat percentage. Pigs with A. suum eggs in faeces at week 6 had a lower average daily weight gain of 61.8 g/day compared with pigs without parasite eggs.Fenbendazole treatment may be a useful option for farms struggling with persistent A. suum problems and demonstrate a beneficial effect on the weight gain of the animals shedding eggs in faeces and result in fewer condemned livers at slaughter.",
keywords = "Ascaris suum, Swine, Anthelmintic, Milk spots, Fenbendazole, Liver rejection",
author = "Brian Lassen and Claudio Oliviero and Toomas Orro and Elias Jukola and Tapio Laurila and Minna Haimi-Hakala and Mari Heinonen",
year = "2017",
month = apr,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.03.005",
language = "English",
volume = "237",
pages = "1--7",
journal = "Veterinary Parasitology",
issn = "0304-4017",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effect of fenbendazole in water on pigs infected with Ascaris suum in finishing pigs under field conditions

AU - Lassen, Brian

AU - Oliviero, Claudio

AU - Orro, Toomas

AU - Jukola, Elias

AU - Laurila, Tapio

AU - Haimi-Hakala, Minna

AU - Heinonen, Mari

PY - 2017/4/15

Y1 - 2017/4/15

N2 - The husbandry of pigs for meat production is a constantly developing industry. Most studies on the effects of Ascaris suum infection in pigs and its prevention with anthelmintics are over a decade old. We examined the effect of 2.5 mg fenbendazole per kg bodyweight administered in drinking water for two consecutive days on A. suum infection 1 and 6 weeks after pigs arrived to fattening units. We hypothesised that the treatment would reduce the presence of A. suum-infections, improve the average daily weight gain of pigs, reduce the percentage of liver rejections in pens by 50% and increase the lean meat percentage at slaughter by 1%.The study included a placebo group (427 pigs) and a treatment group (420 pigs) spanning four different farms previously reporting ≥15% liver rejection. The treatment was given for 2 consecutive days 1 and 6 weeks after the pigs arrived to the fattening unit. Faecal samples were collected during weeks 1, 6 and 12 from all pigs and examined for A. suum eggs. Blood was collected during weeks 1 and 12 from a subgroup of the pigs and examined for anti-A. suum antibodies and clinical blood parameters. Data on liver rejection and lean meat percentage were collected post-mortem.The proportion of Ascaris seropositive pigs changed from 8.6% to 22.2% and 20.3% to 16.3% in the placebo and treatment group respectively. Fenbendazole reduced the presence of A. suum eggs in faeces the percentage of liver rejections by 69.8%. The treatment did not affect daily weight gain or lean meat percentage. Pigs with A. suum eggs in faeces at week 6 had a lower average daily weight gain of 61.8 g/day compared with pigs without parasite eggs.Fenbendazole treatment may be a useful option for farms struggling with persistent A. suum problems and demonstrate a beneficial effect on the weight gain of the animals shedding eggs in faeces and result in fewer condemned livers at slaughter.

AB - The husbandry of pigs for meat production is a constantly developing industry. Most studies on the effects of Ascaris suum infection in pigs and its prevention with anthelmintics are over a decade old. We examined the effect of 2.5 mg fenbendazole per kg bodyweight administered in drinking water for two consecutive days on A. suum infection 1 and 6 weeks after pigs arrived to fattening units. We hypothesised that the treatment would reduce the presence of A. suum-infections, improve the average daily weight gain of pigs, reduce the percentage of liver rejections in pens by 50% and increase the lean meat percentage at slaughter by 1%.The study included a placebo group (427 pigs) and a treatment group (420 pigs) spanning four different farms previously reporting ≥15% liver rejection. The treatment was given for 2 consecutive days 1 and 6 weeks after the pigs arrived to the fattening unit. Faecal samples were collected during weeks 1, 6 and 12 from all pigs and examined for A. suum eggs. Blood was collected during weeks 1 and 12 from a subgroup of the pigs and examined for anti-A. suum antibodies and clinical blood parameters. Data on liver rejection and lean meat percentage were collected post-mortem.The proportion of Ascaris seropositive pigs changed from 8.6% to 22.2% and 20.3% to 16.3% in the placebo and treatment group respectively. Fenbendazole reduced the presence of A. suum eggs in faeces the percentage of liver rejections by 69.8%. The treatment did not affect daily weight gain or lean meat percentage. Pigs with A. suum eggs in faeces at week 6 had a lower average daily weight gain of 61.8 g/day compared with pigs without parasite eggs.Fenbendazole treatment may be a useful option for farms struggling with persistent A. suum problems and demonstrate a beneficial effect on the weight gain of the animals shedding eggs in faeces and result in fewer condemned livers at slaughter.

KW - Ascaris suum

KW - Swine

KW - Anthelmintic

KW - Milk spots

KW - Fenbendazole

KW - Liver rejection

U2 - 10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.03.005

DO - 10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.03.005

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28285891

VL - 237

SP - 1

EP - 7

JO - Veterinary Parasitology

JF - Veterinary Parasitology

SN - 0304-4017

ER -

ID: 179526311