Comparison of moxidectin oral gel and ivermectin oral paste against a spectrum of internal parasites of ponies with special attention to encysted cyathostome larvae.
Abstract: Two dosages of moxidectin oral gel were evaluated and compared to a therapeutic dose of ivermectin oral paste in the control of a spectrum of gastrointestinal parasites of ponies naturally infected in southern Louisiana or Mississippi. Thirty-two mixed-breed ponies ranging in age from one to 21 years were used in this controlled test. Eight weeks prior to the experiment, ponies grazing on contaminated pasture were moved to a paddock and fed a pelleted ration, thus reducing or eliminating the potential for additional infection and ensuring the existence of a population of encysted larvae. Ponies were then allocated to replicates of four animals based on values of fecal strongyle egg counts and percent strongyle larvae composition determined from Baermann sedimentations of fecal cultures. Members of replicates were allocated to one of four treatment groups: moxidectin oral gel administered at 300 micrograms kg-1 body weight, moxidectin oral gel at 400 micrograms kg-1, the oral gel vehicle as negative control, and ivermectin oral paste at 200 micrograms kg-1. Prior to treatment, ponies were confined in pairs to covered concrete runs by treatment group. Two weeks following treatment, necropsy examinations of all animals were performed. Parasites were recovered from the lumen of the stomach, the intestinal tract, the cranial mesenteric artery and its major branches, the peritoneal body wall and from pepsin digests of mucosal scrapings taken from the cecum and large colon. Encysted cyathostome larval burdens were also compared using mural transillumination of segments of the large colon for visualization of the encysted forms. Control ponies were not uniformly infected with the spectrum of parasites; however, moxidectin, at either dosage, compared favorably with ivermectin in the control of the adults of Strongylus vulgaris, Strongylus edentatus, Triodontophorus spp., Oesophagodontus robustus, Trichostrongylus axei, Oxyuris equi, Parascaris equorum, Habronema muscae, as well as both the adult and larval Cyathostominae recovered from the lumen. Moxidectin also appears as efficacious as ivermectin against migrating large strongyle larvae at the two weeks post-treatment evaluation. Moxidectin demonstrated a trend towards greater efficacy against encysted cyathostome larvae than a therapeutic dosage of ivermectin, but this difference was not statistically significant. Moxidectin was less effective than ivermectin against Gasterophilus intestinalis and was equally ineffective as ivermectin against Anoplocephala perfoliata.
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The research investigates the efficacy of moxidectin oral gel and ivermectin oral paste in treating gastrointestinal parasites in ponies. The results indicate that moxidectin was as effective as ivermectin against various parasites, and showed a trend towards slightly better results against encysted cyathostome larvae, but the difference wasn’t statistically significant.
Methodology
Two dosages of moxidectin oral gel (300 and 400 micrograms kg-1 body weight) were evaluated and compared to a therapeutic dose of ivermectin oral paste (200 micrograms kg-1 body weight).
32 ponies aged one to 21 years were tested under controlled conditions, having been moved from infected pastures to a paddock and prepped with a pelleted ration eight weeks prior to help ensure a population of encysted larvae.
The animals were divided into four treatment groups based on fecal strongyle egg counts and percent strongyle larvae composition from fecal cultures.
Ponies were confined in pairs to covered concrete runs by treatment group, and two weeks post-treatment, all animals underwent necropsy examinations for parasites.
Results
Moxidectin was found to be as effective as ivermectin against adult forms of various parasites, including Strongylus vulgaris, Strongylus edentatus, Triodontophorus spp., Oesophagodontus robustus, Trichostrongylus axei, Oxyuris equi, Parascaris equorum, Habronema muscae, and both adult and larval Cyathostominae.
Both drugs were equally ineffective against Anoplocephala perfoliata, but moxidectin was less effective than ivermectin against Gasterophilus intestinalis.
Interestingly, moxidectin showed a trend towards being more effective against encysted cyathostome larvae, although the difference was not significant statistically.
Conclusion
The findings indicate that moxidectin oral gel is as effective as ivermectin oral paste in controlling a broad spectrum of gastrointestinal parasites in ponies.
Although moxidectin appeared to have a potential edge in treating encysted cyathostome larvae, further research is needed to confirm this due to the lack of statistical significance in the observed difference.
Cite This Article
APA
Monahan CM, Chapman MR, Taylor HW, French DD, Klei TR.
(1996).
Comparison of moxidectin oral gel and ivermectin oral paste against a spectrum of internal parasites of ponies with special attention to encysted cyathostome larvae.
Vet Parasitol, 63(3-4), 225-235.
https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-4017(95)00910-8