Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q9UIJ5 (Rec)
58,342 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Deltamethrin (0.01 per cent) applied to the heads of lambs and gimmers at 30 day intervals on two separate farms failed to control damage caused by the sheep headfly , Hydrotaea irritans. Permethrin (0.1 per cent) applied to gimmers at monthly intervals achieved a slight reduction in severity of damage but protection did not extend beyond 14 days. Polyvinyl chloride tags containing 8.5 per cent cypermethrin reduced damage in gimmers to a very low level with protection lasting throughout the summer. Weight gains of lambs suffering headfly damage were significantly less than unaffected lambs.
Vet Rec 1984 Mar 03
PMID:Evaluation of three synthetic pyrethroids in the control of sheep headfly disease. 673 Feb 80

Three groups of sheep, gimmers, ewes with lambs and rams, were sprayed at fortnightly intervals from June to September 1980 with a 0.1 per cent emulsion of permethrin in an attempt to control damage caused by Hydrotaea irritans. Complete prevention of damage was not achieved but the number of sheep affected and the severity of lesions present in affected sheep was significantly reduced in comparison with untreated control groups. Permethrin treatment was also judged to be valuable in the management of rams with head wounds. Variation in susceptibility with age was noted, gimmers being the most severely affected and a breed variation was apparent in the rams which was related to the character of horn present.
Vet Rec 1982 Jan 02
PMID:Field assessment of permethrin in the control of sheep headfly disease. 706 23

Permethrin, applied by knapsack sprayer or spray arch, was used to control flies on cattle in two dairy herds in the United Kingdom. The spray washes were applied at nominal rates of 0.5 litre of 0.1 per cent permethrin per animal and 1.0 litre of 0.05 per cent permethrin per animal respectively. The individual milk yields of two groups of cows were recorded before and after treatment. In both cases there was a significant increase in milk yield after treatment. The mean yield per cow per day during the trial period rose by 0.8 kg in one group and by 1.0 kg in the other group, after treatment. Assessments were made throughout the trial of the level of infestation of Stomoxys calcitrans, Haematobia irritans and non-biting flies.
Vet Rec 1980 Feb 09
PMID:A field trial to determine the effect of fly control using permethrin on milk yields in dairy cattle in the UK. 744 28

Permethrin [3-phenoxybenzyl (+/-) cis, trans--2,2dimethyl-3-(2,2-dichlorovinyl) cyclopropane-1-carboxylate], a new synthetic pyrethroid, was applied to cattle on farms in the United Kingdom to assess its efficacy in fly control under field conditions. When 250 ml 0.1 per cent permethrin was applied to the backs of cattle using a knapsack sprayer, adequate control of horn flies, Haematobia irritans, was achieved for over three weeks. Application of 500 ml 0.1 per cent all over each animal gave one to two weeks' control of stable flies, Stomoxys calcitrans, and satisfactory control of non-biting flies for one week. Application of permethrin through a spray arch, using approximately one litre 0.05 per cent permethrin for each animal, gave similar control.
Vet Rec 1980 Feb 09
PMID:Field trials to assess the efficacy of permethrin for the control of flies on cattle. 744 29