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The Veterinary Record, Vol 139, Issue 4, 83-86
Copyright © 1996 by British Veterinary Association

Occurrence of anthelmintic resistant nematodes on sheep farms in England and goat farms in England and Wales

C. Hong BSc, PhD1, K. R. Hunt HNC1, and G. C. Coles MA, PhD, CBiol, FIBiol2

1 Department of Parasitology, Central Veterinary Laboratory, New Haw, Addlestone, Surrey KT15 3NB
2 Department of Clinical Veterinary Science, University of Bristol, Langford House, Langford, Bristol BS18 7DU

A survey in 1992 showed that 44 per cent of the sheep farms tested in the south west and 15 per cent of those in the north east of England had parasitic nematode worm burdens which were resistant to benzimidazole anthelmintics, and that 65 per cent of the non-dairy goat farms tested in England and Wales had resistant worms. Ostertagia circumcincta was the main species in sheep and Haemonchus contortus in goats. The resistance to benzimidazoles was diagnosed by a combination of an egg hatch assay and a larval development test. A simplified faecal egg count reduction test was used to investigate sheep and goat farms for signs of ivermectin resistance but no positive cases were detected. The initial identification of levamisole resistance on one farm, both from a faecal egg count reduction test and a positive larval development test, was confirmed by a ‘dose and slaughter’ trial.







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Copyright © 1996 British Veterinary Association