Cargando…

An Epidemiological Study of Hypoderma Infection and Control Using Ivermectin in Yaks in Qinghai Province, China

The prevalence of Hypoderma spp. in yaks grazed in the east of Qinghai province was investigated in 2008. In this area, the prevalence in young yaks (1- to 3-year-old) was very high at 82.2–98.7%, whilst in adult yaks (4-year-old and older), the prevalence was 42.4–50.6%. The seasonal development an...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: LI, Wei, FU, Yong, DUO, Hong, GUO, Zhihong, SHEN, Xiuying, HUANG, Fuqiang, FENG, Kai, DANG, Zhisheng, MAO, Peng, WANG, Fang, NASU, Tetsuo, NONAKA, Nariaki
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Japanese Society of Veterinary Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3982821/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24107486
http://dx.doi.org/10.1292/jvms.13-0299
_version_ 1782311217290805248
author LI, Wei
FU, Yong
DUO, Hong
GUO, Zhihong
SHEN, Xiuying
HUANG, Fuqiang
FENG, Kai
DANG, Zhisheng
MAO, Peng
WANG, Fang
NASU, Tetsuo
NONAKA, Nariaki
author_facet LI, Wei
FU, Yong
DUO, Hong
GUO, Zhihong
SHEN, Xiuying
HUANG, Fuqiang
FENG, Kai
DANG, Zhisheng
MAO, Peng
WANG, Fang
NASU, Tetsuo
NONAKA, Nariaki
author_sort LI, Wei
collection PubMed
description The prevalence of Hypoderma spp. in yaks grazed in the east of Qinghai province was investigated in 2008. In this area, the prevalence in young yaks (1- to 3-year-old) was very high at 82.2–98.7%, whilst in adult yaks (4-year-old and older), the prevalence was 42.4–50.6%. The seasonal development and migration pattern of Hypoderma larvae in yak bodies was found to be similar for different locations in this area. The numbers of first, second and third instar larvae detected in yak bodies peaked in October, December and March, respectively. Different doses of ivermectin (125 to 500 µg/kg body weight) almost completely dewormed the larvae from yaks, suggesting that using a quarter of the prescribed dose (500 µg/kg body weight) was effective. In October of each year between 2009 and 2012, ivermectin (125 µg/kg body weight) was administered to a total of 562,995 yaks grazed in four counties in Qinghai province, and the pevalence of Hypoderma larval infection in yaks was reduced to 0.5–1.0%.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3982821
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher The Japanese Society of Veterinary Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-39828212014-04-22 An Epidemiological Study of Hypoderma Infection and Control Using Ivermectin in Yaks in Qinghai Province, China LI, Wei FU, Yong DUO, Hong GUO, Zhihong SHEN, Xiuying HUANG, Fuqiang FENG, Kai DANG, Zhisheng MAO, Peng WANG, Fang NASU, Tetsuo NONAKA, Nariaki J Vet Med Sci Parasitology The prevalence of Hypoderma spp. in yaks grazed in the east of Qinghai province was investigated in 2008. In this area, the prevalence in young yaks (1- to 3-year-old) was very high at 82.2–98.7%, whilst in adult yaks (4-year-old and older), the prevalence was 42.4–50.6%. The seasonal development and migration pattern of Hypoderma larvae in yak bodies was found to be similar for different locations in this area. The numbers of first, second and third instar larvae detected in yak bodies peaked in October, December and March, respectively. Different doses of ivermectin (125 to 500 µg/kg body weight) almost completely dewormed the larvae from yaks, suggesting that using a quarter of the prescribed dose (500 µg/kg body weight) was effective. In October of each year between 2009 and 2012, ivermectin (125 µg/kg body weight) was administered to a total of 562,995 yaks grazed in four counties in Qinghai province, and the pevalence of Hypoderma larval infection in yaks was reduced to 0.5–1.0%. The Japanese Society of Veterinary Science 2013-10-10 2014-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3982821/ /pubmed/24107486 http://dx.doi.org/10.1292/jvms.13-0299 Text en ©2014 The Japanese Society of Veterinary Science http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd) License.
spellingShingle Parasitology
LI, Wei
FU, Yong
DUO, Hong
GUO, Zhihong
SHEN, Xiuying
HUANG, Fuqiang
FENG, Kai
DANG, Zhisheng
MAO, Peng
WANG, Fang
NASU, Tetsuo
NONAKA, Nariaki
An Epidemiological Study of Hypoderma Infection and Control Using Ivermectin in Yaks in Qinghai Province, China
title An Epidemiological Study of Hypoderma Infection and Control Using Ivermectin in Yaks in Qinghai Province, China
title_full An Epidemiological Study of Hypoderma Infection and Control Using Ivermectin in Yaks in Qinghai Province, China
title_fullStr An Epidemiological Study of Hypoderma Infection and Control Using Ivermectin in Yaks in Qinghai Province, China
title_full_unstemmed An Epidemiological Study of Hypoderma Infection and Control Using Ivermectin in Yaks in Qinghai Province, China
title_short An Epidemiological Study of Hypoderma Infection and Control Using Ivermectin in Yaks in Qinghai Province, China
title_sort epidemiological study of hypoderma infection and control using ivermectin in yaks in qinghai province, china
topic Parasitology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3982821/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24107486
http://dx.doi.org/10.1292/jvms.13-0299
work_keys_str_mv AT liwei anepidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT fuyong anepidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT duohong anepidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT guozhihong anepidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT shenxiuying anepidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT huangfuqiang anepidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT fengkai anepidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT dangzhisheng anepidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT maopeng anepidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT wangfang anepidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT nasutetsuo anepidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT nonakanariaki anepidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT liwei epidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT fuyong epidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT duohong epidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT guozhihong epidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT shenxiuying epidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT huangfuqiang epidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT fengkai epidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT dangzhisheng epidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT maopeng epidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT wangfang epidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT nasutetsuo epidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina
AT nonakanariaki epidemiologicalstudyofhypodermainfectionandcontrolusingivermectininyaksinqinghaiprovincechina