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Research article2015Peer reviewed

Failure of ivermectin treatment in Haemonchus contortus infected-Swedish sheep flocks

Höglund, Johan; Gustafsson, Katarina; Ljungström, Britt-Louise; Skarin, Moa; Varady, Marian; Engström, Fredrik

Abstract

Control of gastrointestinal nematodes of veterinary importance in Swedish sheep flocks is primarily based on recurring strategic anthelmintic treatments after detection of strongyle eggs in faeces samples. This study reports reduced efficacy of ivermectin (IVM) againstHaemonchus contortusin naturally infected Swedish sheep flocks. Faecal egg count reduction tests (FECRT) and examinations ofH. contortus-specific DNA with qPCR on larval cultures were applied to samples from 11 sheep flocks (A–K) in south-eastern Sweden between 2013 and 2014. Four of these flocks (D, E, J and K) had been in direct contact with flock H, where IVM treatment failure was first observed in October 2013, some years after the introduction of imported dairy sheep. In flock H, the resistance status to IVM was also confirmed by a larval developmental test. IVM concentrations 15–20 times higher than for susceptible strains ofH. contortuswere required to kill the larvae. In addition, faeces samples were obtained from 37 other Swedish sheep farms where the treatment response to IVM was screened initially in six animals using FEC and qPCR 7–10days after administration of IVM. Six farms where the majority was identified with this pre-screening test (B, C, F, G, I and K), were also investigated in more detail with FECRT as described above after the animals had been allocated to groups and treated orally or injected with a minimum of 0.2mg IVM, 0.2mg doramectin (farm F) or 0.2mg moxidectin per kg body weight (farm A and B). Four flocks (farm A, D, G and I) were also treated with 4.8mg albendazole and/or 7.5mg levamisole per kg body weight. Pre-treatment faeces samples were collected from 15 animals on the same day as deworming. Post-treatment samples were collected 7–10days later, whenever possible from 10 animals per group with the highest pre-treatment egg counts. Based on FECRT results, IVM efficacy toH. contortuswas reduced on six farms (C, D, E, G, H and I) out of 11 farms studied with FECRT. This is the first report of IVM treatment failure inH. contortus-infected sheep in Sweden.

Keywords

Ivermectin; Sheep; Nematodes; Haemonchus contortus; Anthelmintic resistance; Haemonchus-specific quantitative PCR; Faecal egg count reduction test

Published in

Veterinary Parasitology: Regional Studies and Reports
2015, Volume: 1-2, pages: 10-15