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Effectiveness of dewormers and parasite
resistance are current topics of concern
in equine medicine. There are reported
cases of small strongyles being
resistant to many commonly used
dewormers and there are no new classes
of anti-parasitic drugs on the horizon.
This has led us to change our
recommendations regarding how we treat
parasites in horses. The newer
recommendations center around "targeted
deworming" and identifying horses who
are more susceptible to infection /
shedding of parasites and treating them.
Even horses on a deworming program or
daily dewormer should be checked as they
may develop parasites that are resistant
to these medications requiring special
treatment. Horses on the same farm may
have differing levels of infection based
on age, health and immune status so it
is important to check all horses and
follow up on those that appear to be
infected.
Another article on parasite control in
horses from AAEP.
Here are
the basics:
1)
You will need to
deworm all
horses twice yearly
(after the last frost and again in the
spring) with an ivermectin or moxidectin
product to kill large strongyles and
bots. In addition, at least one of these
dewormers should contain praziquantal to
kill tapeworms which are not always
found on fecal examination.
2)
We are recommending
fecal egg
counts be done on all horses in the
spring PRIOR to giving any dewormers,
this will help to identify horses who
are heavily infected and may require
continual deworming. It is estimated
that only 20% of horses will be "heavy
shedders" and need to continue on a
regular fecal testing and deworming
program every 8-12 weeks throughout the
spring, summer & fall. These
horses should also have an
additional fecal egg count 2 weeks after
deworming to determine if the parasites
are being effectively killed by the
dewormer selected.
3)
It is estimated that 80% of horses will
fall into the not infected or "low
shedder" category. In general, these
horses do not require deworming beyond
twice yearly. Moderate shedders will
need an additional fecal egg count in
the summer to determine if additional
deworming is indictaed.
4)
Horses under 2 years of age should be
routinely dewormed every 8 weeks due to
risk of roundworm infection.
Please start by submitting a sample (one
manure ball per horse is adequate) in a
plastic bag or container labeled with
the horse's name, your name & date. The
sample can be refrigerated but should be
< 24 hours old and not frozen. The best
time to get this sample would be in the
spring prior to giving any dewormers, it
must be a minimum of 8 weeks after
giving any ivermectin product or 12
weeks after giving moxidectin. You can
bring these samples to the office or we
would be happy to collect them during
your horse's spring visit.
After your
horse has already had its spring fecal
test, check here to see what treatment /
testing strategy to follow:
|
Shedding category |
Fecals |
Deworming |
Notes |
|
Low shedders
<200eggs/gram |
Repeat yearly in the spring
prior to 1st
deworming
- spring fecal must be at least
12 weeks AFTER their last
deworming to be accurate. |
ivermectin 2x yearly
(1x yearly w/ praziquantal
added) |
Check fecal each spring to
confirm status. |
|
Medium shedders
200-500eggs/gram |
Repeat yearly in the spring
prior to 1st
deworming -
spring fecal must be at least 12
weeks AFTER their last deworming
to be accurate.
Again 12 weeks later (summer) |
ivermectin 2x yearly
(1x yearly w/ praziquantal
added)
Additional deworming in summer
|
Repeat fecal is to determine
need for additional deworming. |
|
Heavy shedders
>500eggs/gram |
Repeat yearly in the spring
prior to 1st
deworming -
spring fecal must be at least 12
weeks AFTER their last deworming
to be accurate.
Again 2 weeks after deworming –
repeated for each new class of
drug used. |
ivermectin 2x yearly
(1x yearly w/ praziquantal
added)
Additional deworming through
summer / fall can be different
products but need fecals to rule
out resistance 1) prior to
deworming
2) again 2 wks after deworming |
Repeat fecal are to check for
resistance to dewormers used. |
This chart only applies to
“healthy” horses > 2 years of age.
Younger horses should be treated as
heavy shedders.
The goal is to decrease
shedding of parasite eggs in the
environment.
Environmental
management for decreasing parasites
1) For small paddocks or stable areas,
pick up manure frequently. It takes a
minimum of 3 days for strongyle eggs to
reach the infective stage (L3), so
removing manure more frequently than
this will help prevent transmission.
2) For pastures, limit the number of
horses grazing in a given area. Given
enough room, horses will naturally avoid
grazing in areas where they have left
manure. The regions where horses
defecate (called “roughs”) have
approximately 15x the parasite
contamination than the areas they
preferentially graze (called “lawns”).
3) Do not drag pastures while horses are
in them, as this will spread the
parasite eggs into the horses grazing
areas. Drag pastures during the hot, dry
summer months and ideally they should be
left vacant for 4 weeks after dragging.
Avoid dragging pastures in the spring or
fall as the increased moisture allows
parasites to survive longer.
4) Only spread manure on pastures /
grazing areas after it has been
composted thoroughly. The manure needs
to be composted with temperatures inside
the pile reaching over 90F for over two
weeks to kill all strongyle larvae.
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