New Perspectives in Equine Intestinal Parasitic Disease: Insights in Monitoring Helminth Infections

Publication date

2018-04

Authors

Pfister, Kurt
van Doorn, DeborahISNI 0000000395008373

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Regular anthelmintic treatment has contributed to anthelmintic resistance in horse helminths. This mass anthelmintic treatment was originally developed owing to a lack of larvicidal drugs against Strongylus vulgaris. The high prevalence of anthelmintic resistance and shortening of strongyle egg reappearance period after avermectins/moxidectins requires epidemiologically appropriate and sustainable measures. Selective anthelmintic treatment is a much-needed deworming approach: More than 50% of adult horses manifest no strongyle egg excretion. In this article, selective anthelmintic treatment procedure is described, with the specific focus on the advantages of an evidence-based, medically appropriate, and sustainable treatment system that slows the development of anthelmintic resistance.

Keywords

Anthelmintic resistance, Egg counts, Epidemiology, Equine, Parascaris, SAT, Strongyles, TST, Taverne

Citation

Pfister, K & van Doorn, D 2018, 'New Perspectives in Equine Intestinal Parasitic Disease : Insights in Monitoring Helminth Infections', Veterinary Clinics of North America. Equine Practice, vol. 34, no. 1, pp. 141-153. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cveq.2017.11.009