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Query: UNIPROT:Q9UIJ5 (
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58,342
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When they were turned out to grass in May 1987 for their first season, 10 calves were dosed with a 5 x 750 mg oxfendazole pulse release bolus (OPRB) and a monensin sodium rumen delivery device (RDD); eight calves received one OPRB; 10 calves received one RDD and eight calves received neither bolus. Each group was set-stocked on individual paddocks which had been grazed during the previous season by cattle which developed clinical parasitic
gastroenteritis
and bronchitis (husk). In July, before they were due to be moved to new pastures in mid-summer, and before they were dosed strategically with levamisole HCl, some of the calves not dosed with an OPRB succumbed to clinical parasitic
gastroenteritis
and husk and received emergency anthelmintic treatment, after which no further clinical episodes occurred. The 'dose and move' strategy was implemented in early August after which both groups not dosed with an OPRB were set-stocked together until the trial ended on October 14, 147 days after turn out. The two groups of calves which had received the OPRB were also moved to new pasture and set-stocked together until the end of the trial. No evidence of clinical helminthiases developed in either of the two groups of calves dosed with OPRBs and their faecal worm egg and larval counts, and plasma pepsinogen activities remained low. They gained significantly more weight than the two groups of calves not dosed with OPRBs (P less than 0.001). The bolus types were compatible and induced no untoward side-effects when used together.
Vet
Rec
1989 Jul 15
PMID:Concurrent use of the oxfendazole pulse release bolus and the monensin rumen delivery device in young grazing cattle. 277 30
Transmissible
gastroenteritis
(TGE) virus, a coronavirus, causes an acute infection of the small intestine of the pig. The disease is rarely fatal in adult animals but can cause extensive mortality in the neonate. Since its first description in Britain in the 1950s, the disease has been epizootic but recently it has become established on some farms and an antigenically related respiratory virus has become endemic in the national herd over the past two years. Piglet immunity to TGE, which relies on passive protection from milk, has been impossible to achieve with vaccines and research has aimed at understanding the nature of the interaction between virus and the pig. Following infection of the pregnant sow, antibody-producing cells migrate to the mammary gland where they secrete virus neutralising antibodies into the milk; prospective vaccines will need to stimulate a similar response. The location and number of antigenic sites on the virus particle associated with neutralisation have been established with monoclonal antibodies and the role of the other viral genes in pathogenesis and immunity is being studied with genetic engineering techniques.
Vet
Rec
1988 May 07
PMID:Transmissible gastroenteritis. 283 32
The significance of the worm burden in the diagnosis of parasitic
gastroenteritis
is examined. It is emphasised that the worm population is in a dynamic state with the calf constantly losing part of its worm burden while picking up new infective larvae. The numbers and proportion of late fourth stage Ostertagia ostertagi larvae gives an indication of the success of the animal in controlling its worm burden. During an examination of the worm population it is also necessary to look at the condition and degree of development of adult female worms to assess the efficiency of the calf's acquired resistance to infection.
Vet
Rec
1989 Jan 28
PMID:Interpretation of abomasal worm burdens in cattle. 292 84
In May 1985 four groups of 10 calves, aged between four and five months, were turned out on to separate, permanent pastures of equal area which had been seeded during the previous few days with larvae of Dictyocaulus viviparus. One group acted as a control, the second was vaccinated with lungworm vaccine before turnout and treated with thiabendazole three, eight and 13 weeks after turnout, while the third and fourth groups were given ivermectin three times (three, eight and 13 weeks after turnout) and twice (three and eight weeks after turnout), respectively. A severe outbreak of parasitic bronchitis resulted in the death of three control calves within five weeks of turnout and parasitic bronchitis and
gastroenteritis
affected the second group of calves after approximately four months at pasture. The calves given ivermectin excreted no lungworm larvae and remained free of clinical parasitism throughout the trial.
Vet
Rec
1987 Jul 04
PMID:Control of parasitic bronchitis and gastroenteritis in grazing cattle by strategic prophylaxis with ivermectin. 295 46
The efficacy of the oxfendazole pulse release bolus system for the control of parasitic
gastroenteritis
and parasitic bronchitis in first-season grazing calves was evaluated in Belgium. Twenty-two calves were allocated to two groups. The calves in one group received a bolus at the time of turn out, while the other group remained untreated. The efficacy of the bolus was assessed by comparison of faecal worm egg counts, plasma pepsinogen concentrations, the antibody response to Ostertagia, Cooperia and Dictyocaulus species total plasma protein and albumin concentrations, and weight gains throughout the grazing season and the housing period. The oxfendazole pulse release bolus provided good control of parasitic
gastroenteritis
dominated by ostertagia. The effects of parasitic gastritis were greatly reduced as shown by the significantly lower values of serum pepsinogen and ostertagia antibody titres. The use of the bolus further reduced the adverse effects of parasitism as indicated by better liveweight gains and normal total plasma protein and albumin concentrations whereas in the untreated control group hypoproteinaemia and hypoalbuminaemia were observed. Most animals exhibited clinical signs of parasitic bronchitis at the end of the grazing season, and the bolus may not adequately control parasitic bronchitis in all cases at all times.
Vet
Rec
1987 Sep 26
PMID:Use of an oxfendazole pulse release bolus in the control of parasitic gastroenteritis and parasitic bronchitis in first-season grazing calves. 296 61
Four groups, each of six male Friesian calves, were set-stocked on separate 0.66 ha paddocks from May 7 until October 23 1986. Each of the animals in groups 1 and 4 was dosed with an oxfendazole pulse release bolus at turn out whereas the animals in groups 2 and 3 were left untreated. Parasite-free naive tracer calves were introduced into each paddock for a limited period 12 days after turn out and again at the end of the trial. No adverse reactions or clinical signs were observed in either of the groups of calves which received boluses. The development of clinical parasitic
gastroenteritis
in both the untreated groups necessitated the humane slaughter of two animals and emergency anthelmintic treatment of the remainder. The lower plasma pepsinogen concentrations, and lower faecal egg and larval counts and worm burdens post mortem, together with the absence of clinical signs of parasitic
gastroenteritis
and bronchitis in the treated calves, confirmed the high efficacy of the bolus treatment.
Vet
Rec
1988 Oct 29
PMID:Control of naturally acquired bovine parasitic bronchitis and gastroenteritis with an oxfendazole pulse release device. 297 64
Under experimental conditions, fenbendazole given at doses of 0.4 and 1.0 mg/kg body weight suppressed calves' faecal output of Ostertagia and Cooperia species eggs and Dictyocaulus viviparus larvae. Both dose levels were given in the form of small daily drenches and the higher level showed greater efficacy. In a grazing experiment, medication with fenbendazole at 1.0 mg/kg/day administered intermittently to calves using an automatic dose dispenser almost completely suppressed the output of trichostrongylid eggs. As a result, infection on the pasture and in the calves remained at a low level throughout the grazing season. By contrast, control pasture and control calves showed rather heavy infection from mid-August onwards with significantly lower weight gains and widespread signs of parasitic
gastroenteritis
. At post mortem examination of representative calves from each group in November, the medicated animals had 99 per cent less Ostertagia species, whether adults or larvae arrested at the early fourth stage, and 95 per cent less Cooperia species compared with controls. Medication in the drinking water suppressed the faecal output of D viviparus larvae for most of the grazing season by comparison with the controls but the medicated calves became infected with this parasite towards the end of the season. Until this problem is overcome, precautions against parasitic bronchitis are advised when this system of medication is adopted.
Vet
Rec
1985 Jan 05
PMID:Efficacy of low doses of fenbendazole and its administration via drinking water in the prophylaxis of nematodiasis in grazing calves. 315 60
In studies on the control of parasitic
gastroenteritis
in calves and sheep, involving an annual rotation of pastures grazed by these host species, it was shown that young cattle could play an important role in the epidemiology of Nematodirus battus, a species usually regarded as a parasite of lambs. Thus, young cattle readily acquired heavy burdens of N battus in spring and the contamination of pastures with eggs from these infections resulted in significant populations of larvae on the herbage, which were infective to both calves and lambs grazed on these pastures in the following year. Although the majority of the N battus eggs hatched in the spring, some hatched in the autumn. The calves developed a strong immunity to N battus during the grazing season as demonstrated by the absence of worms at necropsy in the autumn, despite the presence of infective larvae on the pasture.
Vet
Rec
1987 Oct 03
PMID:Nematodirus battus infection in calves. 342 86
Endemic infection was a common sequel to primary outbreaks of transmissible
gastroenteritis
in large breeding herds of pigs in East Anglia. The main clinical features of the disease were diarrhoea affecting sucking piglets aged about six days or more, diarrhoea among recently weaned pigs and brief episodes of overt clinical recrudescence in part of the herd. Post mortem and bacteriological findings were often more suggestive of colibacillosis than transmissible
gastroenteritis
. In some herds, endemic infection remained clinically mild or inapparent for long periods. Evidence of endemic transmissible
gastroenteritis
infection was found in 43 (50.6 per cent) of 85 herds of pigs studied prospectively between 1981 and 1983. There was a significant correlation with herd size; the disease recurred during the 12 months after primary outbreaks in 36 (65.5 per cent) of 55 herds with over 100 sows compared with seven (23.3 per cent) of 30 herds with less than 100 sows (P less than 0.001). In the larger herds it occurred more commonly where finishers were kept (P less than 0.05). Sow morbidity and management factors during the primary outbreak had no statistically significant effect on the incidence of recrudescence. Epidemiological aspects of the findings are discussed with emphasis on the difficulties associated with the diagnosis and control of endemic transmissible
gastroenteritis
infection.
Vet
Rec
1987 Mar 07
PMID:Transmissible gastroenteritis in endemically infected breeding herds of pigs in East Anglia, 1981-85. 357 22
In a two-year trial involving successive batches of 36 autumn-born steers on two adjacent sites in Hertfordshire, calves treated with ivermectin at three and eight weeks after turn out contaminated pastures much less than untreated control animals. Each year dry summers prevented the larval challenge on the control pastures from building up to high levels until about the time of autumn housing. Atypical outbreaks of parasitic
gastroenteritis
were recorded in May and June of the second year in both groups of control calves. Clinical and parasitological aspects of these outbreaks are discussed in the context of the epidemiology of the disease. It is concluded that the application of measures to control
gastroenteritis
can bring benefits in the early part of the grazing season as well as later in the year.
Vet
Rec
1987 Jan 10
PMID:Early season parasitic gastroenteritis in calves and its prevention with ivermectin. 382 29
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