1. Effects of sarcoptic mange on lactating swine and growing pigs.
- Author
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Arends JJ, Stanislaw CM, and Gerdon D
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Newborn, Birth Weight, Eating, Female, Ivermectin therapeutic use, Lactation, Litter Size, Male, Random Allocation, Scabies drug therapy, Scabies physiopathology, Scabies transmission, Swine, Swine Diseases drug therapy, Swine Diseases transmission, Scabies veterinary, Swine Diseases physiopathology
- Abstract
The impact of Sarcoptic mange on sows and on performance of their offspring from birth to slaughter was determined. Sows naturally infested with Sarcoptic mange were paired, mated to the same boar, and assigned randomly to treated or control farrowing groups. Treated sows received ivermectin s.c. at 300 micrograms/kg body weight; control sows received the vehicle s.c. Sow performance was evaluated via sow feed consumption, litter size, litter birth weights, litter weaning weights and piglet death loss from birth to weaning. Seven replicates (farrowing groups), each with six sow pairs, were included in the trial. Offspring from treated and control sows, 35 head/group, were fed to slaughter weights. Untreated sows had litters that weighed 4.14 kg less than ivermectin-treated sow litters at 21 d (P less than .07). Treated sows consumed 1.95 kg less feed per weaned piglet and .13 kg less feed per kilogram of weaned piglet (P less than .05). Piglets from treated sows were 5.79 kg/head heavier at slaughter (P less than .05) and had a .05 kg/d superior average daily gain (P less than .05).
- Published
- 1990
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