Analyze Diet

Topic:Larvae

Larvae in relation to horses refers to the immature stages of various parasitic organisms that can infect equine hosts. These larvae can originate from different species of internal and external parasites, such as gastrointestinal nematodes and bots. The presence and development of larvae in horses can lead to various health issues, including digestive disturbances, weight loss, and colic. Common parasitic larvae affecting horses include those of Strongylus vulgaris, Parascaris equorum, and Gasterophilus spp. Understanding the life cycle, transmission, and impact of these larvae is essential for effective parasite management and control in equine populations. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the biology, pathology, and management strategies related to larval parasitism in horses.
Observations on the occurrence of five species of Gasterophilus larvae in free-ranging horses in Umbria, central Italy.
Veterinary parasitology    May 1, 1989   Volume 31, Issue 2 173-177 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(89)90032-0
Principato M.Comparative data collected over 4 years show the most frequent species of Gasterophilus infesting free-ranging horses in Umbria (Central Italy) to be G. intestinalis (93.8%), G. nasalis (76.5%) and G. inermis (71%). G. pecorum and G. haemorrhoidalis were less frequent and appeared in 39.3 and 10.8% of the animals, respectively. For each of the 5 species, the duration of gastric and enteric lesions, the average numbers of larvae isolated throughout the year and the probable duration of oral lesions were discussed.
Experimental trichinellosis in horses: biological and parasitological evaluation.
Veterinary parasitology    April 1, 1989   Volume 31, Issue 1 19-36 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(89)90005-8
Soule C, Dupouy-Camet J, Georges P, Ancelle T, Gillet JP, Vaissaire J, Delvigne A, Plateau E.Three groups of three horses each were, respectively, infected with 5000, 20,000 and 50,000 larvae of Trichinella spiralis. The strain used was isolated from a human biopsy during horsemeat-related outbreaks of trichinellosis in France. Transient muscular disorders were only observed in two of the horses infected with 50,000 larvae but none of the horses had fever. A significant increase in blood eosinophils was noticed in 5 horses. Serum LDH, aldolase and CPK peaked at the fifth week post-infection. Specific IgG assayed by indirect immunofluorescence and ELISA, appeared 2-5 weeks post-infecti...
A Hypoderma diana (Diptera: Hypodermatidae) infection in a horse.
The veterinary quarterly    January 1, 1989   Volume 11, Issue 1 56-57 doi: 10.1080/01652176.1989.9694197
Hendrikx WM, Jansen J, de Vries TJ.An infection with second-stage larvae of the warble-fly H. diana in a horse is described. The second-stage larvae were incapable of developing into the third stage, because horses are unsuitable hosts and because the infected horse was treated with an insecticide. Since the horse was used for dragging trees in the forests, the infection was likely contracted via contact with H. diana, a normal parasite of roe deer in the Netherlands.
Preliminary investigations on the effects of a Strongylus vulgaris larval extract, mononuclear factors and platelet factors on equine smooth muscle cells in vitro.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1989   Volume 13, Issue 6 479-489 doi: 10.1007/BF00402572
Morgan SJ, Storts RW, Stromberg PC, Sowa BA, Lay JC.Factors involved in the proliferation of equine vascular smooth muscle cells were studied in vitro. The most prominent proliferative responses in cultured vascular smooth muscle cells were induced by Strongylus vulgaris larval antigen extract (LAE) and platelet-derived factors. Less significant proliferative responses were obtained with conditioned media from S. vulgaris LAE stimulated and from unstimulated equine mononuclear leukocytes. Additionally, vascular smooth muscle cells exposed to S. vulgaris LAE developed numerous perinuclear vacuoles and were more spindle-shaped than control or smo...
Evaluation of ivermectin for larvicidal effect in experimentally induced Parascaris equorum infections in pony foals.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 11 1983-1985 
DiPietro JA, Lock TF, Todd KS, Sanecki RK.A controlled test was carried out on 15 pony foals inoculated with 1,500 +/- 108.8 infective Parascaris equorum eggs. The foals were assigned to 3 treatment groups. Treatments given on postinoculation day 11 included 0.2 mg of ivermectin/kg of body weight, formulated as paste (n = 5), or liquid (n = 5), or no treatment (controls; n = 5). The foals were euthanatized on postinoculation day 25, and examined for larvae in the small intestine, lungs, and liver. Larvae were not found in foals treated with ivermectin liquid or paste, whereas significantly (P less than 0.05) higher mean numbers (960.9...
World Association for the Advancement of Veterinary Parasitology (W.A.A.V.P.) guidelines for evaluating the efficacy of equine anthelmintics.
Veterinary parasitology    November 1, 1988   Volume 30, Issue 1 57-72 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(88)90142-2
Duncan JL, Arundel JH, Drudge JH, Malczewski A, Slocombe JO.These guidelines have been designed to assist in the planning, operation and interpretation of studies which would serve to assess the efficacy of drugs against internal parasites of horses. Although the term anthelmintic is used in the title and text, these guidelines include studies on drug efficacy against larvae of horse bot flies, Gasterophilus spp, which are non-helminth parasites commonly occurring in the stomach of horses. The advantages, disadvantages and application of critical and controlled tests are presented. Information is also provided on selection of animals, housing, feed, do...
Distribution of adult and larval cyathostomes in helminth-naive foals after primary infection.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1988   Volume 20, Issue 4 296-297 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1988.tb01528.x
Reinemeyer CR, Herd RP, Gabel AA.No abstract available
Piperazine resistance in population-B equine strongyles: a study of selection in Thoroughbreds in Kentucky from 1966 through 1983.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 7 986-994 
Drudge JH, Lyons ET, Tolliver SC, Lowry SR, Fallon EH.Observations were completed over an 18-year period (1966 through 1983) in Thoroughbred mares (15/year) and yearlings (11 to 24/year) on a farm where benzimidazole-resistant small strongyles had emerged previously (1962 to 1965). This farm was operated as a closed, nonboarding type, which included a racing stable for its home-bred foals. At 2-week intervals, counts of worm eggs per gram of feces (EPG) and larvae per gram of feces were done to monitor strongyle infections and efficacies of bimonthly (every 8 weeks) antiparasitic treatments that were administered by stomach tube or were fed (dich...
Efficacy of ivermectin in the oral paste formulation against naturally acquired adult and larval stages of Parascaris equorum in pony foals.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 7 1000-1003 
French DD, Klei TR, Taylor HW, Chapman MR, Wright FR.The efficacy of ivermectin in oral paste formulation at a dosage of 200 micrograms/kg of body weight was tested against naturally acquired larval and adult stages of Parascaris equorum, in a controlled study. Twenty infected pony foals 18 to 27 weeks of age were randomly allocated to 2 groups of 10 each and were placed in dry lots. Foals in 1 group were given ivermectin on day 0. Necropsies and parasite recoveries from small intestines and lung tissues were performed on 5 foals in each group at 2 weeks after treatment (WAT) and on the remaining foals at 5 WAT. Ivermectin was 100% effective aga...
Development of a novel in vitro equine anthelmintic assay.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    June 1, 1988   Volume 11, Issue 2 177-182 
Folz SD, Pax RA, Klei TR, Thomas EM, Ash KA, Conder GA, Bennett JL.An in vitro assay involving the use of a horse strongyle (Strongylus edentatus) and the micromotility meter has been developed to test for equine anthelmintic activity. Three commercially available equine anthelmintics (dichlorvos, ivermectin, and pyrantel pamoate) and an investigational drug (p-toluoyl chloride phenylhydrazone) were evaluated in this assay at four concentrations. After a 24-h incubation, greater than or equal to 10 micrograms/ml of all four drug treatments significantly (P less than or equal to 0.05) reduced the motility of ensheathed L-3 S. edentatus larvae, thereby indicati...
Intramural hematoma in the jejunum of a mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1988   Volume 192, Issue 3 379-380 
Kobluk CN, Smith DF.An intramural hematoma involving a 40-cm segment of the distal portion of the jejunum caused intestinal obstruction and colic in a mature mare. The involved intestine was resected, and an end-to-end anastomosis was performed. The mare recovered completely, but 4 years later had colic caused by incarceration and volvulus of the distal portion of the jejunum, involving fibrous abdominal adhesions. The cause of hematoma was not identified; however, rupture of an intramural vessel after migration of Strongylus vulgaris larvae was considered a possibility because of the histologic observation of an...
Classification of the main macroscopic lesions produced by larvae of Gasterophilus spp. (Diptera:Gasterophilidae) in free-ranging horses in Umbria.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1988   Volume 78, Issue 1 43-52 
Principato M.Listed and described herein are the main macroscopic lesions produced along the whole digestive tract of free-ranging horses by larvae of the five Gasterophilus spp., occurring in Umbria, a region of central Italy: Gasterophilus intestinalis, Gasterophilus nasalis, Gasterophilus pecorum, Gasterophilus inermis, Gasterophilus haemorrhoidalis. Lesions are classified on the basis of their sizes and shapes and the host's anatomic sites infested, and they are examined in relation to the developmental stages of larvae causing them. The examination of the lesions shows that it is very difficult to dif...
Interactions between the predacious fungus Arthrobotrys oligospora and third-stage larvae of a series of animal-parasitic nematodes.
Veterinary parasitology    January 1, 1988   Volume 26, Issue 3-4 329-337 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(88)90101-x
Nansen P, Grønvold J, Henriksen SA, Wolstrup J.Interactions between the predacious hyphomycete Arthrobotrys oligospora and third-stage larvae of nine animal-parasitic nematodes were tested in vitro. The trap-inducing capabilities of the ruminant trichostrongylus Cooperia oncophora, C. curticei, Haemonchus contortus and Ostertagia ostertagi and of equine cyathostomes were almost comparable to those of free-living soil nematodes, and significantly higher than those of the porcine Oesophagostomum dentatum and Oe. quadrispinulatum and of the murine Nematospiroides dubius. The trap-forming potential of Dictyocaulus viviparus was poor. All anima...
Development of free-living stages of equine strongyles in faeces on pasture in a tropical environment.
Veterinary parasitology    January 1, 1988   Volume 26, Issue 3-4 285-296 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(88)90097-0
Mfitilodze MW, Hutchinson GW.The development of the free-living stages and yields of infective third stage strongyle larvae in faeces from a horse with a mixed natural infection deposited on pasture plots were studied over a 2-year period in a coastal area in tropical north Queensland. Two sets of faecal masses (one exposed to, and the other protected from the action of a natural population of dung beetles) were deposited monthly and after 7 days faecal samples were taken for larval recovery and counts. Hatching and development of the free-living stages occurred in faeces on pasture throughout the year. Development was ra...
Epidemiology of strongyles in ponies in Ontario.
Canadian journal of veterinary research = Revue canadienne de recherche veterinaire    October 1, 1987   Volume 51, Issue 4 470-474 
Slocombe JO, Valenzuela J, Lake MC.The transmission of strongyles among 54 Shetland-cross mature ponies was examined from May 30 to November 22, 1983 when the ponies were on pasture and over the ensuing winter when they were in loose housing. Fecal and pasture herbage samples were taken fortnightly through the pasture season and periodically thereafter. Three foals born and reared on pasture were weaned and removed from pasture, two in early August and one in mid-September, and housed for a period before necropsy. Daily maximum and minimum air temperature and total precipitation were recorded. The mean fecal strongyle egg count...
Seasonal occurrence and distribution of Gasterophilus intestinalis and Gasterophilus nasalis in the stomachs of equids in Texas.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1987   Volume 48, Issue 8 1225-1232 
Price RE, Stromberg PC.Stomachs of 271 horses and ponies from 2 sources were evaluated for the presence of Gasterophilus intestinalis and G nasalis larvae, through 2 overlapping 12-month periods of bot fly activity in southern Texas. Equids (n = 140) from one source had nearly 96% of their stomachs infected, whereas equids (n = 131) from another source had 44% of their stomachs infected by Gasterophilus spp. Seasonal dynamics of the bot infection indicated the highest average number of bot larvae per infected stomach occurred in the winter and spring. The smallest average number of bots per infected stomach occurred...
[Ecological characteristics of horse stomach botflies in Uzbekistan].
Parazitologiia    July 1, 1987   Volume 21, Issue 4 577-579 
Enileeva NKh.The paper describes the flight periods and dynamics of abundance of horse botflies, life span of females and males, effect of environmental factors on the activity of flies and their behaviour, potential fecundity of different species of botflies, duration of embryonal development, preservation of viability of larvae in egg membranes, localization of different stages of botflies in the host, and methods of their control.
Experimental Trichinella infections in ponies. Smith HJ, Snowdon KE.Light Trichinella infections were established in three ponies given 1000, 5000 and 25000 T. spiralis spiralis infective larvae respectively by stomach tube. A predilection site of infection in all ponies was the tongue. Anti-Trichinella antibodies were detected in all ponies by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using a T. spiralis spiralis excretory-secretory antigen. The ponies given 5000 and 25000 infective larvae reacted positively on days 26 and 24 postinfection, respectively, using a criterion of greater than or equal to 5 X mean optical density readings of preinfection sera as positi...
Evaluation of fenbendazole for larvacidal effect in experimentally induced Parascaris equorum infections in pony foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1987   Volume 190, Issue 12 1548-1549 
Vandermyde CR, DiPietro JA, Todd KS, Lock TF.Fifteen pony foals were inoculated with 1,500 +/- 298.7 infective Parascaris equorum eggs. The foals were assigned to 3 treatment groups. Treatments included 10 mg of fenbendazole/kg given once on postinoculation day (PID) 11, 10 mg of fenbendazole/kg given daily on PID 11 to 15, and no treatment (controls). The foals were euthanatized on PID 25 and examined for P equorum larvae in the small intestine, lungs, and liver. Significantly (P less than 0.05) lower mean numbers of P equorum larvae were found in the small intestine of foals treated on PID 11 to 15 (1.4 [range, 0 to 6]) than in the sma...
[Testing of a deworming scheme for horses].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    June 1, 1987   Volume 112, Issue 11 639-652 
Borgsteede FH, Bruin G, Smolders EA.In 1983 and 1984 the effect of a deworming scheme, in which horses were treated at turn out and 4 and 8 weeks later, on the egg output, larval differentiation, weight gain, herbage infestation and in 1984, the percentages of some serum proteins were tested. In 1983 the experiment was done with 42 mares, 54 two year old male horses and 42 male yearlings, kept in groups with permanent or rotational grazing. In 1984 only 90 male yearlings were investigated. In 1983 albendazole and ivermectin were used, 1984 ivermectin. The results of the faecal examinations showed that after ivermectin treatment ...
Suppurative splenitis and peritonitis in a horse after gastric ulceration caused by larvae of Gasterophilus intestinalis.
Australian veterinary journal    May 1, 1987   Volume 64, Issue 5 155-158 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1987.tb09669.x
Dart AJ, Hutchins DR, Begg AP.A 12-year-old Thoroughbred mare, with a history of anorexia, dramatic weight loss, fluctuating pyrexia and intermittent diarrhoea after an episode of colic, was presented for examination with depression, emaciation and ataxia. Thoracic and abdominal paracenteses yielded copious quantities of inflammatory exudate. Palpation per rectum revealed an enlarged spleen. The primary alterations in haematology included a severe leucocytosis with a left shift, and a hyperproteinaemia characterised by hypoalbuminaemia and hypergammaglobulinaemia. Post-mortem examination revealed a low grade pleurisy and p...
Evaluation of ivermectin paste in the treatment of ponies for Parascaris equorum infections.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    May 1, 1987   Volume 190, Issue 9 1181-1183 
DiPietro JA, Lock TF, Todd KS, Reuter VE.Twenty ponies less than 18 months of age and infected with Parascaris equorum were treated with either 0.2 mg of ivermectin/kg of body weight (n = 10) or a placebo (n = 10; controls). Five control and 5 ivermectin-treated ponies were euthanatized 14 and 35 days after treatment, respectively. At necropsy, the small intestinal contents, lungs, and liver were examined for larvae and/or adult P equorum. Significantly (P less than 0.02) higher mean total numbers of P equorum were found in the small intestinal contents of the controls on day 14 (51) and on day 35 (21) than in the ivermectin-treated ...
Strongylus vulgaris in the tunica media of arteries of ponies and treatment with ivermectin. Slocombe JO, McCraw BM, Pennock PW, Ducharme N, Baird JD.A preliminary investigation was made into the effect of fourth-stage Strongylus vulgaris larvae sequestered in the tunica media of ileocolic arteries of pony foals treated with ivermectin. The foals had been reared parasite-free, inoculated with infective larvae and given orally a placebo or ivermectin paste. Two foals received subsequently one or two further inoculations with larvae and treatment with ivermectin. Arteriography was used to identify the lesions in the ileocolic artery following inoculation and their regression following treatment. At necropsy, foals were examined for lesions an...
Specific serum protein changes associated with primary and secondary Strongylus vulgaris infections in pony yearlings.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 2 133-137 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb02608.x
Kent JE.The concentrations of haptoglobin, immunoglobin (Ig)G(T) and IgG were measured in the serum of four previously parasite-free pony yearlings following a single dose of 700 (Group H) or 200 (Group L) stage three Strongylus vulgaris larvae (L3) and following a reinfection with the same doses 34 weeks later. The results are compared with an uninfected control pony. The haptoglobin concentration increased during Weeks 1 to 6 and 14 to 17 after infection in the serum of the ponies receiving 200 L3, but in only one pony dosed with 700 L3 (during Weeks 1 to 16). The serum haptoglobin also increased du...
Observations on the epidemiology and control of Strongylus vulgaris infections.
Veterinary parasitology    January 1, 1987   Volume 23, Issue 1-2 69-75 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(87)90025-2
Eysker M, Wemmenhove R.The epidemiology and control of helminth infections in the horse were studied in four small grazing experiments between 1981 and 1984 at the University of Utrecht. At autopsy in November or December negligible Strongylus vulgaris burdens were found in the cranial mesenteric artery of four groups of ponies, which had been treated with an anthelmintic in July and subsequently transferred to a clean pasture. Considerable arterial S. vulgaris burdens were seen in three groups of ponies which were treated with an anthelmintic in July without a move to clean pasture, and in another group of ponies i...
Development and survival of free-living stages of equine strongyles under laboratory conditions.
Veterinary parasitology    January 1, 1987   Volume 23, Issue 1-2 121-133 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(87)90030-6
Mfitilodze MW, Hutchinson GW.In a series of laboratory studies the optimum conditions for the development and survival of the free-living stages of strongyle parasites occurring in horses in tropical north Queensland were determined. No differences in behaviour were noted between the strongyle species. Development to the infective stage occurred only between 10 and 35 degrees C. The rate was affected by temperature, taking 15-24 days and 3 days, respectively, at the lowest and highest temperatures for the developing stages to reach the infective third stage. Yields of infective larvae were very low outside the range 20-33...
Epidemiology and control of equine strongylosis at Newmarket.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1986   Volume 18, Issue 6 447-452 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1986.tb03684.x
Herd RP.Seasonal rises in mean faecal egg output were observed in grazing ponies in spring (578 eggs per gram) and in summer (930 epg) on 30 April and 2 September, respectively, in untreated ponies. Pasture infectivity reached a peak of 18,486 third stage larvae (L3)/kg on 17 September, two weeks after peak egg counts, coincidental with abundant September rainfall (103.0 mm). Differentiation of infective larvae from pasture showed the cyathostomes (small strongyles) to be predominant, but Trichostrongylus axei assumed major importance from late August to October. The large strongyles were rarely detec...
Comparison of two control systems for cyathostome infections in the horse and further aspects of the epidemiology of these infections.
Veterinary parasitology    November 1, 1986   Volume 22, Issue 1-2 105-112 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(86)90012-9
Eysker M, Jansen J, Kooyman FN, Mirck MH, Wensing T.The small strongylid infections of two groups of three yearling female Shetland ponies and one yearling Shetland tracer pony were studied. One group was set stocked from April to November and was treated monthly with 5 mg kg-1 albendazole from two days before turnout until July. The other group grazed similar pasture until July, was treated with 5 mg kg-1 albendazole and subsequently removed to pasture grazed by sheep from April to July. The tracer ponies were added to both groups in September. The efficacy of both methods was not completely satisfactory probably because of low efficacy of ant...
Serum protein changes in ponies on different parasite control programmes.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1986   Volume 18, Issue 6 453-457 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1986.tb03686.x
Herd RP, Kent JE.Serum protein responses were examined in 52 ponies divided into five groups and subjected to various control strategies that resulted in pasture infectivity ranging from 706 to 18,486 infective third stage, cyathostome and Trichostrongylus axei larvae per kilogram of herbage (L3/kg) by 17 September 1984. Major protein changes occurred only in young ponies (Groups 4 and 5) and were observed before exposure to maximum numbers of pasture larvae (Group 4; 10,210 L3/kg, Group 5: 10,042 L3/kg) on 17 September. It appeared that a primary infection of T axei was a greater stimulus to serum beta-globul...
Efficacy of an oxibendazole-trichlorfon paste formulation against third stage larvae of Gasterophilus intestinalis and its safety in horses.
The Veterinary record    September 20, 1986   Volume 119, Issue 12 294-296 doi: 10.1136/vr.119.12.294
Bauer C, Bürger HJ.A paste formulation containing 14.3 per cent of oxibendazole and 44 per cent of trichlorfon was administered to 33 ponies and horses. The dose rate used was equivalent to 10 mg and 30 mg/kg bodyweight, of oxibendazole and trichlorfon respectively. After treatment 25 animals passed between one and 82 third stage larvae of Gasterophilus intestinalis in their faeces. Dosing with 0.2 mg ivermectin/kg bodyweight three weeks later resulted in six animals expelling between one and four bots. The efficacy of the oxibendazole-trichlorfon paste was on average 96.2 per cent. This drug combination given t...
1 10 11 12 13 14 17